| Literature DB >> 28421980 |
Stephen M Stahl1, Debbi A Morrissette2, Gianni Faedda3, Maurizio Fava4, Joseph F Goldberg5, Paul E Keck6, Yena Lee7, Gin Malhi8, Ciro Marangoni9, Susan L McElroy6, Michael Ostacher10, Joshua D Rosenblat7, Eva Solé11, Trisha Suppes10, Minoru Takeshima12, Michael E Thase13, Eduard Vieta11, Allan Young14, Mark Zimmerman15, Roger S McIntyre7.
Abstract
A significant minority of people presenting with a major depressive episode (MDE) experience co-occurring subsyndromal hypo/manic symptoms. As this presentation may have important prognostic and treatment implications, the DSM-5 codified a new nosological entity, the "mixed features specifier," referring to individuals meeting threshold criteria for an MDE and subthreshold symptoms of (hypo)mania or to individuals with syndromal mania and subthreshold depressive symptoms. The mixed features specifier adds to a growing list of monikers that have been put forward to describe phenotypes characterized by the admixture of depressive and hypomanic symptoms (e.g., mixed depression, depression with mixed features, or depressive mixed states [DMX]). Current treatment guidelines, regulatory approvals, as well the current evidentiary base provide insufficient decision support to practitioners who provide care to individuals presenting with an MDE with mixed features. In addition, all existing psychotropic agents evaluated in mixed patients have largely been confined to patient populations meeting the DSM-IV definition of "mixed states" wherein the co-occurrence of threshold-level mania and threshold-level MDE was required. Toward the aim of assisting clinicians providing care to adults with MDE and mixed features, we have assembled a panel of experts on mood disorders to develop these guidelines on the recognition and treatment of mixed depression, based on the few studies that have focused specifically on DMX as well as decades of cumulated clinical experience.Entities:
Keywords: Mixed; bipolar; depression; guidelines; unipolar
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28421980 DOI: 10.1017/S1092852917000165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CNS Spectr ISSN: 1092-8529 Impact factor: 3.790