Oxytocin and eating disorders: Knowledge gaps and future directions

Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2023 Aug:154:106290. doi: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2023.106290. Epub 2023 May 11.

Abstract

Eating disorders continue to be a major public health issue and important cause of morbidity and premature mortality, particularly for young people. Yet in a concerning dialectic, this occurs in the context of an epidemic of obesity which, with its medical complications, constitutes another vexing public health challenge. While it is not an eating disorder per se obesity is often comorbid with eating disorders. Effective treatment for both eating disorders and obesity has proven to be elusive and in the search for novel therapeutic interventions, the prosocial, anxiolytic, brain plasticity and metabolic effects of oxytocin (OT) have been examined from this perspective. The availability of intranasal oxytocin (IN-OT) has led to a number of interventional treatment studies in anorexia nervosa (AN), bulimia nervosa (BN), binge eating disorder (BED), their atypical and subclinical forms and in medical and psychiatric conditions co-occurring or comorbid with these, obesity with BED would be included here. The aim of this mini review is to collate recent findings on OT as a novel therapeutic intervention in eating disorders and obesity and to identify and address some of the knowledge gaps in the use of IN-OT. The wider clinical perspective utilised here might better address some of the gaps and identify future directions of research. Clearly much remains to be done for OT to fulfil its therapeutic promise in eating disorders. OT might yet be of therapeutic promise and will be appreciated where treatment advances have been hard to come by and prevention challenging for these disorders.

Keywords: Anorexia nervosa; Bulimia nervosa; Eating disorders; Obesity; Oxytocin; Social anxiety.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Anorexia Nervosa* / psychology
  • Binge-Eating Disorder* / psychology
  • Binge-Eating Disorder* / therapy
  • Bulimia Nervosa* / psychology
  • Feeding and Eating Disorders*
  • Humans
  • Obesity / psychology
  • Oxytocin / pharmacology
  • Oxytocin / therapeutic use

Substances

  • Oxytocin