Literature DB >> 18945397

Overdiagnosis of bipolar disorder among substance use disorder inpatients with mood instability.

Joseph F Goldberg1, Jessica L Garno, Ann M Callahan, Denise L Kearns, Barry Kerner, Sigurd H Ackerman.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Among substance use disorder (SUD) patients, mood instability and high-risk behaviors may suggest the presence of bipolar disorder. However, active substance abuse impedes efforts to diagnose bipolar illness validly in patients with mood complaints.
METHOD: The authors retrospectively reviewed records for 85 adults admitted sequentially over a 1-year period (August 1, 2005, to July 31, 2006) to a private inpatient dual-diagnosis unit for substance abuse/dependence and mood disorders. A senior research psychiatrist conducted diagnostic interviews based on DSM-IV criteria to ascertain current and lifetime manic or hypomanic episodes during abstinent periods.
RESULTS: Only 33% of subjects with suspected bipolar diagnoses (28/85) met DSM-IV criteria for bipolar I or II disorder. DSM-IV bipolar patients were significantly older (p = .029) and more likely to have made past suicide attempts (p = .027), abused fewer substances (p = .027), and were less likely to abuse cocaine (p < .001) than those failing to meet DSM-IV criteria. Inability to affirm bipolar diagnoses most often resulted from insufficient DSM-IV "B" symptoms associated with mania or hypomania (55% or 45/82), inability to identify abstinent periods for assessing mood symptoms (36%, 29/81), and inadequate durations of manic/hypomanic symptoms for DSM-IV syndromic criteria (12%, 10/84). Patients not meeting DSM-IV criteria were most often presumed to have bipolar disorder solely on the basis of the presence of mood instability, although this feature held little predictive value for DSM-IV bipolar diagnoses.
CONCLUSIONS: Many patients with active SUDs who are diagnosed in the community with bipolar disorder may not actually meet DSM-IV criteria for bipolar I or II disorder. Caution must be exercised when attempting to diagnose such patients, particularly when mood instability or cocaine use is present. Copyright 2008 Physicians Postgraduate Press, Inc.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18945397     DOI: 10.4088/jcp.v69n1110

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Psychiatry        ISSN: 0160-6689            Impact factor:   4.384


  16 in total

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Review 8.  A Review of 20 Years of Research on Overdiagnosis and Underdiagnosis in the Rhode Island Methods to Improve Diagnostic Assessment and Services (MIDAS) Project.

Authors:  Mark Zimmerman
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Review 9.  Epidemiology and risk factors for bipolar disorder.

Authors:  Tobias A Rowland; Steven Marwaha
Journal:  Ther Adv Psychopharmacol       Date:  2018-04-26

10.  Aripiprazole in the acute and maintenance phase of bipolar I disorder.

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