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. 2019 May 1;2019(5):CD004780. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD004780.pub4

Godart 2012.

Methods RCT
Participants Country: France
 Diagnostic tool: DSM‐ IV
 No. screened: 116
 No. randomised: Total: 60; TAU + FT: 30; TAU: 30
 No. started trial: Total: 58; TAU + FT: 29; TAU: 29
 No. dropped out during intervention: Total: Total: 5; TAU + FT: 3; TAU: 2
 No. dropped out during follow‐up: Total: 1; TAU + FT: 0; TAU: 1
 No. analysed (observed case): Total: 59; TAU + FT: 29; TAU: 30
Mean age in years (SD): Total; 16.6 (1.6); TAU + FT: 16.4 (1.7); TAU: 16.6 (1.7)
 Age range in years: Total: 16.6 (1.6) years; TAU + FT: 17.3 (1.3); TAU: 16.9 (3.1)
 Gender %: Female 100%
 Subtype purging %: Total: 13.3% (8/60); TAU + FT: 16.7% (5/3); TAU: 10% (3/30)
 Subtype restricting %: No detail
 Age of onset: Total 14.8 (1.6); TAU + FT: 14.7 (1.7); TAU 15.0 (1.5)
 Duration of illness: Total: 16.6 (6.8) months; TAU + FT: 17.1 (8.3) months; TAU: 16.1 (5.2) months
 Baseline weight: Total: 83.6 (5.2) ABW% (at inclusion), 77.8 (8.9) EBW%, 42.9 (7.3) kgs; TAU + FT:83.9 (5.6) ABW%, 75.7 (7.2) EBW%, 43.7 (5.9) kgs; TAU: 83.3 (5.0) ABW%, 80.1 (10.3) EBW%, 42.0 (8.8) kgs
 Baseline BMI: Total: 16.9 (1.1); TAU + FT: 17.0 (1.2); TAU: 16.9 (1.0)
 Baseline eating disorder scale score: Total: 60.7 (35.1) EDI; TAU + FT: 61.3 (36.2) EDI; TAU: 60.2 (34.6) EDI
 Baseline purging: Total: 13.3% (8/60); TAU + FT: 16.7% (5/3); TAU: 10% (3/30)
 Comorbidity: "The two groups were comparable in terms of comorbid mood and anxiety disorders (i.e., major depressive disorder, social phobia, panic disorder, agoraphobia, obsessive compulsive disorder, post traumatic stress disorder; details available on request from the authors)." Pg 4
 Details on living arrangements: Total: 9 (15%) not intact family status
 Family education/employment/income: No detail
 Recruitment strategy: AN hospitalised inpatients
 
 Exclusion criteria:
  1. Psychotic disorder

  2. + 19 years at illness onset

  3. AN duration > 3 years

  4. Inability to speak or read French, or understand the interview questions, or both

  5. Any metabolic pathology interfering with eating or digestion (e.g. diabetes)

  6. Parents with a psychotic disorder

Interventions Setting of care: Inpatient and outpatient
 Training/qualification of care provider(s): The psychiatrist and psychologist involved in the study had > 4 years of experience in the outpatient care of AN adolescents
 Treatment manual: Unclear for TAU, states manual not used for FT component
 Supervision of treatment: No detail
 Adherence to treatment: No detail
 
 Intervention group 1Description: Treatment as usual + family therapy
Family therapy sessions targeting intra‐familial dynamics, but not eating disorder symptoms
Length: 18 months, length and number of sessions unclear (Mean FT sessions attended 11.8, SD 5.7)
 
 Intervention group 2Description: Treatment as usual
 Consisted in ambulatory care initiated before hospital discharge and was tailored according to the mental and physical state of the participant. It included individual consultations, regular interviews involving the parents, and, if required, individual psychotherapy with another therapist. At each appointment, the psychiatrist conducted clinical investigation of the participant’s mental state, eating habits, medical condition, and psychosocial environment. In addition, the psychiatrist provided support, co‐ordinated services (e.g. general practitioner, psychotherapist, dietician or nutritionist, social worker, and school), prescribed medication as necessary, and offered parental support and guidance regarding conflicts they had with their daughter. Parents were advised to be supportive but to leave decisions about food to the adolescent and to discuss the difficulties they observed not directly with their daughter during or after the meal, but at the time of the consultations with the psychiatrist and their daughter. In addition, nutritional/dietetic advice was provided to the participants who were not gaining weight or not gaining sufficient weight
Length: 18 months, length and number of sessions unclear (Mean TAU sessions attended 27.2, SD 12.7)
Outcomes Eating psychopathology
MRS Outcome measures
EDI
Behavioural indices
BMI
Amenorrhea
Rehospitalisation (psychiatric or for AN)
Global pathology and interpersonal functioning
GOAS
SAS: Social Adjustment Scale
Notes Funded by: The study was funded by the Projet Hospitalier de Recherche Clinique (CRC‐ PHRC, 1997, AOM97133 AP‐HP French Ministry of Health); and promoted by Assistance Publique des Hôpitaux de Paris (AP‐HP). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish or preparation of the manuscript.
Risk of bias
Bias Authors' judgement Support for judgement
Random sequence generation (selection bias) Low risk Allocation to 1 of the 2 parallel treatment groups (30 in each) was performed using the SPSS randomisation program (FC). The 2 groups were randomised by blocks of 30
Allocation concealment (selection bias) Low risk The result was issued to participants in a sealed envelope at inclusion by the psychiatrist in charge of signing the consent form
Blinding of participants and personnel (performance bias) 
 All outcomes High risk Therapists and participants cannot be blinded in trials of family‐based therapy
Blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias) 
 All outcomes Low risk Outcome assessor blinded
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) 
 All outcomes Unclear risk Some missing data, up to 18% of total sample (e.g. at 6‐month follow‐up), ITT analysis and LOCF analysis undertaken.
Selective reporting (reporting bias) High risk MINI reportedly administered at intake and end of treatment, but not reported at end of treatment. Data at 6 and 12 months not reported
Other bias Unclear risk
  1. No details about supervision of or adherence to treatment, so fidelity of treatment unclear

  2. Imbalance in treatment session numbers