Food addiction (FA) is an emerging construct describing a compulsive and dysregulated pattern of food consumption that parallels mechanisms observed in substance-related addictions. This study aimed to investigate the prevalence and clinical correlates of FA in a sample of 141 Italian adult inpatients diagnosed with eating disorders (ED). Participants completed standardized self-report instruments assessing FA (YFAS 2.0), binge-eating behaviours (BES), ED-related psychopathology (EDI-3), body image distress (BUT), and general psychological symptoms (SCL-90) at admission (T0) and discharge (T1) from a multidisciplinary ED rehabilitation program. FA showed a high prevalence (85.6%), with more than half of the participants (51.1%) classified as severe. YFAS 2.0 scores were significantly higher among patients with binge eating disorder (BED) and bulimia nervosa (BN). FA severity was strongly associated with bulimic and binge-eating symptoms and interoceptive deficits, but not with body dissatisfaction. Regression analyses indicated that FA at admission was significantly associated with the severity of bulimic and binge-eating symptoms, independently of age, BMI, and illness duration. Overall, findings suggest that FA may reflect a dimensional feature associated with symptom severity across eating disorders, particularly in binge-spectrum presentations. Routine assessment of FA could therefore serve as a potentially useful clinical indicator and guide personalized interventions aimed at reducing compulsive eating behaviours and preventing relapse.

Boltri, M., Oprandi, L., Mastrocola, S., Cera, G., Brusa, F., Gabutti, C., Villa, V., Manzo, F., Scalia, A., Apicella, E., Savino, S., Castelnuovo, G., Mendolicchio, L., Food addiction as a transdiagnostic feature associated with binge-eating symptoms in eating disorders: prevalence and rehabilitation outcomes in an Italian inpatient population, <<EATING AND WEIGHT DISORDERS>>, 2026; 31 (1): --- [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/340141]

Food addiction as a transdiagnostic feature associated with binge-eating symptoms in eating disorders: prevalence and rehabilitation outcomes in an Italian inpatient population

Boltri, Margherita;Villa, Valentina;Castelnuovo, Gianluca;Mendolicchio, Leonardo
2026

Abstract

Food addiction (FA) is an emerging construct describing a compulsive and dysregulated pattern of food consumption that parallels mechanisms observed in substance-related addictions. This study aimed to investigate the prevalence and clinical correlates of FA in a sample of 141 Italian adult inpatients diagnosed with eating disorders (ED). Participants completed standardized self-report instruments assessing FA (YFAS 2.0), binge-eating behaviours (BES), ED-related psychopathology (EDI-3), body image distress (BUT), and general psychological symptoms (SCL-90) at admission (T0) and discharge (T1) from a multidisciplinary ED rehabilitation program. FA showed a high prevalence (85.6%), with more than half of the participants (51.1%) classified as severe. YFAS 2.0 scores were significantly higher among patients with binge eating disorder (BED) and bulimia nervosa (BN). FA severity was strongly associated with bulimic and binge-eating symptoms and interoceptive deficits, but not with body dissatisfaction. Regression analyses indicated that FA at admission was significantly associated with the severity of bulimic and binge-eating symptoms, independently of age, BMI, and illness duration. Overall, findings suggest that FA may reflect a dimensional feature associated with symptom severity across eating disorders, particularly in binge-spectrum presentations. Routine assessment of FA could therefore serve as a potentially useful clinical indicator and guide personalized interventions aimed at reducing compulsive eating behaviours and preventing relapse.
2026
Inglese
Boltri, M., Oprandi, L., Mastrocola, S., Cera, G., Brusa, F., Gabutti, C., Villa, V., Manzo, F., Scalia, A., Apicella, E., Savino, S., Castelnuovo, G., Mendolicchio, L., Food addiction as a transdiagnostic feature associated with binge-eating symptoms in eating disorders: prevalence and rehabilitation outcomes in an Italian inpatient population, <<EATING AND WEIGHT DISORDERS>>, 2026; 31 (1): --- [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/340141]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/340141
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