{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Trajectory of ghrelin and PYY around a test meal in males and females with avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder versus healthy controls. {Author}: Rozzell-Voss KN;Becker KR;Tabri N;Dreier MJ;Wang SB;Kuhnle M;Gydus J;Burton-Murray H;Breithaupt L;Plessow F;Franko D;Hauser K;Asanza E;Misra M;Eddy KT;Holsen L;Micali N;Thomas JJ;Lawson EA; {Journal}: Psychoneuroendocrinology {Volume}: 167 {Issue}: 0 {Year}: 2024 Sep 6 {Factor}: 4.693 {DOI}: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2024.107063 {Abstract}: Disruptions in appetite-regulating hormones may contribute to the development and/or maintenance of avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID). No study has previously assessed fasting levels of orexigenic ghrelin or anorexigenic peptide YY (PYY), nor their trajectory in response to food intake among youth with ARFID across the weight spectrum. We measured fasting and postprandial (30, 60, 120 minutes post-meal) levels of ghrelin and PYY among 127 males and females with full and subthreshold ARFID (n = 95) and healthy controls (HC; n = 32). We used latent growth curve analyses to examine differences in the trajectories of ghrelin and PYY between ARFID and HC. Fasting levels of ghrelin did not differ in ARFID compared to HC. Among ARFID, ghrelin levels declined more gradually than among HC in the first hour post meal (p =.005), but continued to decline between 60 and 120 minutes post meal, whereas HC plateaued (p =.005). Fasting and PYY trajectory did not differ by group. Findings did not change after adjusting for BMI percentile (M(SD)ARFID = 37(35); M(SD)HC = 53(26); p =.006) or calories consumed during the test meal (M(SD)ARFID = 294(118); M(SD)HC = 384 (48); p <.001). These data highlight a distinct trajectory of ghrelin following a test meal in youth with ARFID. Future research should examine ghrelin dysfunction as an etiological or maintenance factor of ARFID.