| Literature DB >> 27613276 |
Katie Joyce1, Andrew Thompson2,3, Steven Marwaha4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We aimed to investigate a key element of the early intervention approach whether treatment at an earlier stage of bipolar disorder is more effective than later in its course.Entities:
Keywords: Bipolar disorder; Early intervention; Effectiveness; First episode; Multiple episodes; Treatment
Year: 2016 PMID: 27613276 PMCID: PMC5017982 DOI: 10.1186/s40345-016-0060-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Bipolar Disord ISSN: 2194-7511
Fig. 1Prisma flow chart
Characteristics and results of included primary studies and meta-analyses
| Author | Sampling | N | Main outcomes measured | Main results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Berk et al. ( | Meta-analysis of 12 Lilly funded RCTs | 4346 | Symptomatic response and relapse using manic symptoms, depression, and global impression | Increased response comparing 1–5 episodes with >10 episode groups in treatment of depression, mania, and maintenance studies |
| Scott et al. ( | Meta-analysis of RCTs | 716 | Relapse rates | Psychological adjuncts were more effective in patients who had experienced less episodes |
| Colom et al. ( | Patients from the Bipolar Disorders Program at the Hospital Clinic of Barcelona | 120 | Time to recurrence | Increased response to treatment in people with fewer previous episodes, particularly if less than seven |
| Dion et al. ( | Patients from the clinical evaluation unit of McLean hospital, USA | 67 | Functioning via the modified vocational status index and modified location code index scales | At follow-up, the first admission had increased rates of employment vs the previous admissions (64 vs 33 %) |
| Franchini et al. ( | Outpatient Lithium Clinic for Mood Disorders, Milan | 270 in total | Recurrence rates | Initiating lithium therapy during the first 10 years of bipolar onset results in less recurrence |
| Jiang ( | Acute psychiatric service Taiwan | 63 | Vocational and residential functioning | The first admission (70.2 %) vs multiple admission (31.8 %) employed and able to live independently at follow-up |
| Keck et al. ( | Patients from the University of Cincinnati Hospital psychiatric units | 71 | Symptomatic and syndromal outcomes in manic symptoms, depression, global assessment of functioning, and comorbidity | The first episode (using the first admission as proxy) mania associated with shorter hospital stays compared with multiple episode patients |
| Rosa et al. ( | Patients at Santiago Apostol Hospital and in the Bipolar Disorders Program at Hospital Clinic of Barcelona | 119 | Psychosocial functioning | Treatment of patients in the first episode (using the first admission as proxy) resulted in improved symptomatic and psychosocial outcomes in comparison to patients treated in later episodes, even after controlling for the effects of age and affective symptoms |
| Tohen et al. ( | Inpatients and outpatients initiating or changing oral medication for treatment of acute mania | 3115 | Recovery, response and remission using clinical global impression, mania symptoms, and depression | Patients treated in their first episode of bipolar reached recovery or remission more often and faster at 12 weeks compared with patients experiencing a later episode |
| Swann et al. ( | Inpatients | 154 | Response to anti-manic medication | Increased response to treatment for patients who had experienced fewer episodes, particularly if less than ten |
Fig. 2Bar chart to show risk of bias in included studies