DOI: 10.1002/eat.70161 ISSN: 0276-3478

Cortical Thickness and Appetite Hormones in Adolescent Obesity and Binge Eating Disorder: A Comparative Study

Serkan Turan, İbrahim Mert Erbaş, Fatma Ceren Sarıoğlu, Berrin Çavuşoğlu, Ezgi Molla, Ali Rıza Şişman, Sevay Alsen Güney, Handan Güleryüz, Ayhan Abacı, Yeşim Öztürk, Aynur Pekcanlar Akay

ABSTRACT

Objective

This study examined cortical thickness and appetite‐regulating hormones—neuropeptide Y (NPY) and ghrelin—to better understand the neurobiological mechanisms underlying binge eating disorder (BED) and obesity in adolescence. We compared adolescents with BED and obesity, adolescents with obesity without BED, and healthy controls (HCs), and explored the relationships among these measures, BMI, and psychological symptoms.

Method

Seventy adolescents (aged 12–18 years) were included: 24 adolescents with BED and obesity, 24 adolescents with obesity without BED, and 22 HC. Cortical thickness was measured using 3.0 T structural MRI with FreeSurfer‐based analysis, and fasting serum levels of NPY and ghrelin were quantified by ELISA. Participants also completed the Eating Attitudes Test‐40 (EAT‐40), the Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire (EDE‐Q), the Children's Depression Inventory (CDI), and the State–Trait Anxiety Inventory for Children (STAI‐C).

Results

Both groups with obesity showed significantly elevated NPY levels compared to HCs ( p  < 0.001), with no difference between adolescents with and without BED; fasting total ghrelin levels did not differ across groups. Adolescents with BED exhibited reduced cortical thickness in the right posterior cingulate cortex relative to both comparison groups ( p  = 0.002), while left posterior cingulate thinning was observed in both groups with obesity versus HCs ( p  = 0.004). No significant group differences were found in insular or anterior cingulate thickness. Both groups with obesity showed greater depressive symptoms, disordered eating attitudes, and eating‐related psychopathology than HCs. In multiple regression analyses adjusted for diagnostic group membership, higher BMI ( β  = 0.47, p  < 0.001) and lower left insular cortical thickness ( β  = −0.45, p  = 0.031) were independently associated with elevated NPY levels.

Conclusion

Findings suggest that elevated NPY levels may represent a shared neurobiological feature of adolescent obesity, whereas reduced right posterior cingulate cortical thickness may be more specifically associated with the diagnosis of BED. These findings contribute to understanding the neurobiological correlates of disordered eating behaviors during adolescence.

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