GGrantIndex
← Search

Sex & Gender Informed Profiles of Eating Behaviors in Autism Across Childhood & Young Adulthood

$92,972R03FY2025MHNIH

Univ Of North Carolina Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill NC

Investigators

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY Challenging or restrictive eating behaviors are well-documented in autistic individuals. Restrictive eating behaviors, such as food selectivity, refusal and neophobia occur at a greatly increased rate in autism. Eating disorders, such as anorexia nervosa, avoidant restrictive food intake disorder, and binge eating disorder, are also diagnosed at highly elevated rates in autism. However, the associations between eating behavior profiles and later clinical outcomes, such as eating order diagnoses, are poorly understood, with a lack of longitudinal data to meaningfully capture these trajectories. This is an urgent research need given the clinical significance of restrictive eating at a nutritional, behavioral, and social level. Given the historic assigned sex at birth difference in autism diagnoses, most studies fail to fully consider the role of sex on eating behaviors. However, in neurotypical populations, there are variations in challenging eating behaviors and rates of eating disorders by sex. In more recent studies, these trends have been mirrored in autistic samples. However, no study has considered the intersection of sex and gender on eating behaviors in autism, despite the importance of gender in the development and maintenance of problematic eating behaviors and eating disorders. The overarching goal of this NIMH R03 is to leverage data across four existing cohorts of autistic and non- autistic individuals, enriched for females and spanning a wide age range (4 to 39 years), to identify profiles of eating behaviors in autism and determine how these vary by age, sex, and gender. Importantly, these studies all employed harmonized measures of eating behaviors to achieve a total sample size of approximately 1,200 individuals. This R03 has two aims: (1) Using latent profile analysis (LPA), characterize profiles of eating behaviors in a large sample of autistic and non-autistic individuals; and (2) Determine how profiles of eating behaviors vary by diagnosis, age, sex and gender. This R03 directly addresses NIMH Goal 2 to examine mental illness trajectories across the lifespan studying eating behaviors across a wide age range, spanning early childhood through to adulthood, and pan-NIH goals, including studying sex as a biological variable, the inclusion of gender within our analysis, and leveraging data that focuses on an underrepresented population (autistic females). This data driven approach will enable us to identify age-related trends in challenging eating behaviors in autism. Such data will allow us to generate hypotheses that can be tested prospectively within our ongoing NIH-funded longitudinal samples, spanning early childhood through to young adulthood, to understand the mechanisms by which challenging eating behaviors escalate to an eating disorder.

View original record on NIH RePORTER →