Francesc Colom1, Dominic Lam. 1. Bipolar Disorders Program, IDIBAPS, Barcelona Stanley Medical Research Center, Barcelona, Spain. fcolom@clinic.ub.es
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A relevant paradigm shift in the treatment of bipolar disorder started a few years ago; crucial findings on the usefulness of psychological interventions clearly support switching from an exclusively pharmacological therapeutic approach to a combined yet hierarchical model in which pharmacotherapy plays a central role, but psychological interventions may help cover the gap that exists between theoretical efficacy and "real world" effectiveness. Hereby we review the efficacy of several adjunctive psychotherapies in the maintenance treatment of bipolar patients. METHODS: A systematic review of the literature on the issue was performed, using MEDLINE and CURRENT CONTENTS databases. "Bipolar", "Psychotherapy", "Psychoeducation", "Cognitive-behavioral" and "Relapse prevention" were entered as keywords. RESULTS: Psychological treatments specifically designed for relapse prevention in bipolar affective disorder are useful tools in conjunction with mood stabilizers. Most of the psychotherapy studies recently published report positive results on maintenance as an add-on treatment, and efficacy on the treatment of depressive episodes. Interestingly, several groups from all over the world reported similar positive results and reached very similar conclusions; almost every intervention tested contains important psychoeducative elements including both compliance enhancement and early identification of prodromal signs - stressing the importance of life-style regularity - and exploring patients' health beliefs and illness-awareness. CONCLUSIONS: The usefulness of psychotherapy for improving treatment adherence and clinical outcome of bipolar patients is nowadays unquestionable, and future treatment guidelines should promote its regular use amongst clinicians. As clinicians, it is our major duty, to offer the best treatment available to our patients and this includes both evidence-based psychoeducation programs and newer pharmacological agents.
BACKGROUND: A relevant paradigm shift in the treatment of bipolar disorder started a few years ago; crucial findings on the usefulness of psychological interventions clearly support switching from an exclusively pharmacological therapeutic approach to a combined yet hierarchical model in which pharmacotherapy plays a central role, but psychological interventions may help cover the gap that exists between theoretical efficacy and "real world" effectiveness. Hereby we review the efficacy of several adjunctive psychotherapies in the maintenance treatment of bipolarpatients. METHODS: A systematic review of the literature on the issue was performed, using MEDLINE and CURRENT CONTENTS databases. "Bipolar", "Psychotherapy", "Psychoeducation", "Cognitive-behavioral" and "Relapse prevention" were entered as keywords. RESULTS: Psychological treatments specifically designed for relapse prevention in bipolar affective disorder are useful tools in conjunction with mood stabilizers. Most of the psychotherapy studies recently published report positive results on maintenance as an add-on treatment, and efficacy on the treatment of depressive episodes. Interestingly, several groups from all over the world reported similar positive results and reached very similar conclusions; almost every intervention tested contains important psychoeducative elements including both compliance enhancement and early identification of prodromal signs - stressing the importance of life-style regularity - and exploring patients' health beliefs and illness-awareness. CONCLUSIONS: The usefulness of psychotherapy for improving treatment adherence and clinical outcome of bipolarpatients is nowadays unquestionable, and future treatment guidelines should promote its regular use amongst clinicians. As clinicians, it is our major duty, to offer the best treatment available to our patients and this includes both evidence-based psychoeducation programs and newer pharmacological agents.
Authors: Miguel A Boarati; Yuan-Pang Wang; Ana Paula Ferreira-Maia; Ana Rosa S Cavalcanti; Lee Fu-I Journal: Prim Care Companion CNS Disord Date: 2013-05-02
Authors: Sharon Simpson; Emma Barnes; Emily Griffiths; Kerry Hood; David Cohen; Nick Craddock; Ian Jones; Daniel J Smith Journal: BMC Psychiatry Date: 2009-08-12 Impact factor: 3.630