Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4186484 Journal of Affective Disorders 2012 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundThe efficacy and tolerability of antidepressants (ADs) to treat or avoid episodes of depression in bipolar disorder (BPD) patients as well as reasons for using them remain unresolved.MethodsWe analyzed patient-characteristics and outcomes of episodes of acute major depression among 290 adult, DSM-IV BPD patients (71% type-I, 52% women) at the Hospital Clinic of Barcelona; 80% were given an AD and 20% were not; 80% of both groups also received mood-stabilizers. We evaluated factors associated with AD-treatment using bivariate analyses and multiple logistic-regression modeling.ResultsFactors associated with AD-use by multivariate modeling ranked: [a] more years ill, [b] depressive first-lifetime episode, [c] more depressions/year, [d] melancholic index episode, and [e] less affective illness in first-degree relatives. Within 8 weeks, depression improved by ≥ 50%, less often among BPD patients given an AD (64.4%; 38.6% without switching into hypo/mania) than not (82.1%; 78.6% without switching).ConclusionsUse of ADs to treat acute BP-depression was very common and associated with a more severe clinical history. Mood-switching was prevalent with AD-treatment even with mood-stabilizers present.

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