Purpose: A high number of people affected by eating disorders also show severe sleep disturbances, as well as circadian rhythm disruptions. However, research is relatively limited, often yielding conflicting results, especially when comparing clinical populations to healthy controls. Few interventions currently integrate sleep and circadian considerations into ED treatment. This review aims to synthesize recent evidence on sleep and circadian alterations in EDs and to identify research and clinical priorities. Methods: A systematic research through four academic databases was conducted during September 2025, seeking studies on the theme published between 2020–2025. Eligible articles were narratively synthesized to provide a comprehensive and recent overview of the state of the art. Quality appraisal tools were used according to the studies’ design. Results: Eleven studies met inclusion criteria. Sleep disturbances were most consistently reported in individuals with anorexia nervosa, including poor sleep quality. Evidence for bulimia nervosa and binge-eating disorder was limited and inconclusive, since only a study was included. Five case-control studies compared clinical populations to healthy controls and three studies assessed the effects of ED-focused treatments on sleep. Two studies evaluated a sleep-specific intervention, while one employed bright light therapy. Objective sleep measures were rarely employed. Conclusion: Sleep and circadian disturbances represent an underexplored but clinically relevant dimension of EDs. This review provides a systematically organized synthesis of recent evidence, clarifies diagnosis-specific patterns, and identifies methodological and intervention gaps. Integrating sleep and circadian considerations into assessment and treatment may enhance rehabilitation outcomes and inform the development of more effective, targeted interventions.
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Giulia Cera
Serena Scarpelli
Silvamaria Mastrocola
Nature and Science of Sleep
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Cera et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69fd7cd4bfa21ec5bbf05c44 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.2147/nss.s590618