Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4186903 | Journal of Affective Disorders | 2010 | 5 Pages |
ObjectiveTo identify clinical and neurocognitive predictors of long-term functional outcome in patients with bipolar disorderMethodsA total of 32 subjects who met criteria for bipolar I or II disorder were recruited from the Barcelona Bipolar Disorder Program and were assessed clinically and neuropsychologically at baseline. After an average 4-year follow-up, they were interviewed with the Functioning Assessment Short Test (FAST) to assess functional outcome. Multivariate analyses were applied to identify clinical and neurocognitive predictors of functional outcome.ResultsThe main regression model for predictors of overall psychosocial functioning identified subclinical depressive symptoms (ß = 0.516, t = 3.51, p = 0.002), and free delayed recall in a verbal memory task (ß = − 0.314, t = − 2.144, p = 0.041), accounting for 36% of the variance. Specific predictors of occupational functioning were, again, subthreshold depression (ß = 0.435, t = 2.8, p = 0.009) and a measure of executive function, digits backwards (ß = − 0.347, t = − 2.23, p = 0.034). This model explained around 28% of the variance (corrected R2 = 0.28; F = 6.38, gl = 2, p = 0.004).ConclusionsSubdepressive symptomatology together with neurocognitive impairments related to verbal memory and executive functions are predictor variables of long-term functional outcome in bipolar disorder.