| Literature DB >> 30202599 |
Mekdes Demissie1, Charlotte Hanlon2, Rahel Birhane3, Lauren Ng4, Girmay Medhin5, Abebaw Fekadu6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adjunctive psychological interventions for bipolar disorder have demonstrated better efficacy in preventing or delaying relapse and improving outcomes compared with pharmacotherapy alone. AIMS: To evaluate the efficacy of psychological interventions for bipolar disorder in low- and middle-income countries.Entities:
Keywords: Psychosocial interventions; bipolar affective disorders; low- and middle-income countries
Year: 2018 PMID: 30202599 PMCID: PMC6127962 DOI: 10.1192/bjo.2018.46
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BJPsych Open ISSN: 2056-4724
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of the study selection process.
Summary of studies, interventions and patient characteristics for included studies
| Authors | Baseline, | Type of treatment intervention/control | Mode of intervention | Sessions, | Duration of intervention (weeks) | Duration of follow-up (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Faria | 32/29 | PE/TAU | Individual | 6 | 6 | Pre–post |
| Husain | 18/16 | PE/TAU | Individual | 12 | 12 | Pre–post |
| Eker & Harkin 2012 (Turkey) | 36/35 | PE/TAU | Group | 6 | 6 | Pre–post |
| Cuhadar | 32/31 | PE/TAU | Group | 7 | 7 | Pre–post |
| Rahmani | 38/38 | PE/TAU | Group | 10 | 5 | Pre–post |
| Dogan | 16/16 | PE/TAU | Individual | 3 | 3 | 3 |
| George | 30/30 | PE/TAU | Group | 4 | 16 | 3 |
| Kurdal | 40/40 | PE/TAU | Group | 21 | 11 | 3 |
| Faridhosseini | 13/13 | PE/TAU | Group | 8 | 4 | 6 |
| Cardoso | 32/29 | PE/TAU | Group | 6 | 6 | 6 |
| Bahredar | 15/15/15 | PE/TAU/placebo | Group | 9 | 9 | 6 |
| de Barros | 32/23 | PE/placebo | Group | 16 | 16 | 12 |
| Gumus | 41/41 | PE/TAU | Individual | 4 | 4 | 12 |
| Javadpour | 54/54 | PE/TAU | Individual | 8 | 8 | 18 |
| Bordbar | 29/30 | FPE/TAU | Group | 1 | 1 | 12 |
| Costa | 27/14 | CBT/TAU | Group | 14 | 14 | 6 |
| Gomes | 23/27 | CBT/TAU | Group | 18 | 22 | 12 |
| Ives-Deliperi | 16/7/10 | MBCT/TAU/HC | Group | 8 | 8 | Pre–post |
PE, psychoeducation; TAU, treatment as usual; FPE, family psychoeducation; CBT, cognitive–behavioural therapy; MBCT, mindfulness-based cognitive therapy; HC, Healthy control.
Psychological interventions for prevention of relapse/recurrence
| Authors | Intervention group | Final analysis, | Outcome measured | Proportion with outcome | χ2 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention group | Control group | |||||||
| de Barros | G-PE | 28/18 | Depressive relapse | – | – | 0.18 | ||
| Manic relapse | – | – | 0.09 | |||||
| Gomes | G-CBT | 22/25 | Relapse, | 14/23 | 14/27 | 0.28 | 0.590 | |
| Time to first relapse, median (range) weeks | 31 (66) | 11.5 (48) | −2.554 | 0.011 | ||||
| Gumus | I-PE | 37/41 | Recurrence, | 7/37 | 14/41 | 1.583 | – | 0.21 |
| Experienced more than one recurrence, | 2 | 8 | 0.36 | – | 0.221 | |||
| Faridhosseini | G-PE | 12/12 | Recurrence, | 1/13 | 9/13 | 0.001 | ||
| Patients experienced more than one relapse, | 0 | 2 | ||||||
| Javadpour | I-PE | 45/41 | Average number of recurrences | 0.77 | 2.02 | <0.001 | ||
| Bordbar | G-FPE | 29/28 | Total relapse, | 4/29 | 9/28 | 0.006 | ||
| Experienced more than one recurrence, | 1 | 2 | – | |||||
| Time to first relapse in months, mean | 6 | 4.8 | – | |||||
G-PE, group psychoeducation; G-CBT, group cognitive–behavioural therapy; TAU, treatment as usual; I-PE, individual psychoeducation; G-FPE, group family psychoeducation.
Psychological intervention for reducing symptom severity
| Authors | Final analysis, | Intervention | Assessment time (month) | Test statistics and | Measure of effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mood symptom severity | |||||
| Dogan & Sabanciogullari (2003) | 14/12 | I-PE | 3 | I-PE: | – |
| TAU: | – | ||||
| Depressive symptoms | |||||
| Faria | 19/26 | I-PE | Post-intervention | AMD = −1.86 (95% CI −6.34 to 2.61) | |
| Husain | 16/11 | I-PE | 3 | AMD = −10.3 (95% CI −16.8 to −4.5), SES = −1.17 | |
| Javadpour | 45/41 | I-PE | 18 | – | |
| Faridhosseini | 12/12 | G-PE | Post-intervention | Mean 1.0 (s.e. = 1.78) | |
| Cardoso | 19/26 | G-PE | Post-intervention | – | |
| 6 | – | ||||
| de Barros | 28/18 | G-PE | 12 | ES = 0.007 | |
| Costa | 25/12 | G-CBT | 6 | – | |
| Ives-Deliperi | 16/7 | G-MBCT | Post-intervention | – | |
| Manic symptoms | |||||
| Faria | 19/26 | I-PE | Post-intervention | AMD = −5.93 (95% CI −0.28 to −12.15) | |
| Husain | 16/11 | I-PE | 3 | AMD = −6.0 (95% CI −8.7 to 3.7), SES = −1.18 | |
| Javadpour | 45/41 | I-PE | 18 | – | |
| Faridhosseini | 12/12 | G-PE | Post-intervention | Mean 1.91 (s.e.) 0.88 | |
| Cardoso | 19/26 | G-PE | Post-intervention | – | |
| 6 | – | ||||
| de Barros | 28/18 | G-PE | 12 | ES = 0.02 | |
| Costa | 25/12 | G-CBT | 6 | – | |
| Anxiety symptoms | |||||
| Ives-Deliperi | 16/7 | G-MBCT | Post-intervention | – | |
| Costa | 25/12 | G-CBT | 6 | ||
| Emotional dysregulation | |||||
| Ives-Deliperi | 16/7 | G-MBCT | Post-intervention | – |
I-PE, individual psychoeducation; TAU, treatment as usual; AMD, adjusted mean difference; SES, standardised effect size; G-PE, group psychoeducation; ES, effect size; G-CBT, group cognitive–behavioural therapy; G-MBCT, group mindfulness-based cognitive therapy; R2, squared value of correlation coefficient or the proportion of explained variation.
a. The comparison was made within arm and the reported result for the treatment group.
Psychological intervention to improve adherence
| Authors | Final analysis, | Measurement | Follow-up duration after post-intervention (months) | Group | Assessment time point, mean (s.d.)/mean/% | Test statistics, | Measure of effect | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline assessment | End-line assessment | |||||||
| Adherence to medications | ||||||||
| Husain | 16/11 | MMAS | – | I-PE | 1.7 (1.7) | 0.9 (1.4) | AMD = −1.22 (95% CI −2.18 to 0.14), SES = 0.81 | |
| TAU | 1.3 (1.7) | 2.1 (1.5) | ||||||
| Rahmani | 36/36 | MARS | – | G-PE | 6.8 (1.9) | 9.4 (2.4) | AMD = 2.3 (95% CI 2.21 to 2.14) | |
| TAU | 6.6 (1.4) | 7.1 (2.2) | ||||||
| Total score, MAC | – | PE | 10.6 (2.5) | 17.8 (3.7) | AMD = 7.7 (95% CI 7.20 to 9.50) | |||
| TAU | 9.8 (2.2) | 10.1 (2.3) | ||||||
| Javadpour | 45/41 | MARS | 18 | I-PE | – | 7.91 | – | |
| TAU | – | 3.73 | ||||||
| Bahredar | 15/15/15 | MARS | 6 | G-PE | 6.27 (0.88) | 7.92 (1.38) | – | |
| TAU | 6.53 (0.64) | 4.33 (0.49) | ||||||
| Placebo | 6.47 (0.52) | 4.36 (0.67) | ||||||
| Bordbar | 29/28 | Duration of continuing medication in month | 3 | G-FPE | – | 2.46 (0.46) | – | |
| TAU | – | 2.67 (0.48) | ||||||
| 6 | G-FPE | – | 5.76 (0.51) | – | ||||
| TAU | – | 5.00 (0.77) | ||||||
| 9 | G-FPE | – | 8.48 (0.95) | – | ||||
| TAU | – | 7.04 (1.26) | ||||||
| 12 | G-FPE | – | 11.41 (1.02) | – | ||||
| TAU | – | 9.14 (1.43) | ||||||
| Dogan & Sabanciogullari 2003 (Turkey) | 14/12 | Proportion of patients who use lithium regularly | – | I-PE | 35.7% | 85.7% | – | |
| TAU | 50% | 41.7% | ||||||
| Proportion of patients with normal serum lithium level | – | I-PE | 57.1% | 100% | – | |||
| TAU | 58.3% | 58.3% | ||||||
| Eker & Harkin 2012 (Turkey) | 30/33 | MARS | – | G-PE | 40% | 86.7% | χ2 = 24.649, | – |
| TAU | 38.9% | 24.2% | ||||||
| George | 24/26 | Patient's diary and counting tablets | 3 | G-PE | – | 100% | – | |
| TAU | – | 84.6% | ||||||
| Adherence to psychiatric visit | ||||||||
| Bordbar | 29/28 | Number of psychiatric visit | 3 | G-FPE | – | 2.76 (0.43) | – | |
| TAU | – | 2.57 (0.57) | ||||||
| 6 | G-FPE | – | 5.34 (0.81) | – | ||||
| – | TAU | – | 4.46 (0.96) | |||||
| 9 | G-FPE | – | 7.72 (1.36) | – | ||||
| – | TAU | – | 6.21 (1.50) | |||||
| 12 | G-FPE | – | 10.34 (1.54) | – | ||||
| – | TAU | – | 7.86 (1.84) | |||||
| Faridhosseini | 12/12 | Patient and family report | 6 | G-PE | – | 3.25 (0.69) | – | |
| TAU | – | 1.41 (1.67) | ||||||
MMAS, Morisky Medication Adherence Scale; I-PE, individual psychoeducation; TAU, treatment as usual; AMD, adjusted mean difference; SES, standardised effect size; MARS, Medication Adherence Rating Scale; G-PE, group psychoeducation; MAC, Medicine Adherence Checklist; PE, psychoeducation; G-FPE, group family psychoeducation.
Psychological intervention to improve quality of life and functioning
| Reference | Final analysis, | Intervention | Follow-up duration after post-intervention (month) | Outcome | Test statistics and | Measure of effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Husain | 16/11 | I-PE | 3 | Overall QoL in EQ-5D index | AMD = 0.24 (95% CI 0.1–0.5), SES = 0.88 | |
| Overall QoL in EQ-5D VAS | AMD = 26.8 (95% CI 12.2–41.8), SES = 1.14 | |||||
| Dogan & Sabanciogullari 2003 (Turkey) | 14/12 | I-PE | 3 | General health domain | ||
| Physical aspect | ||||||
| Psychological | ||||||
| Social aspects | ||||||
| Environmental | ||||||
| Javadpour | 45/41 | I-PE | 18 | Physical aspect | ||
| Mental health | ||||||
| Social aspects | ||||||
| Environmental | ||||||
| Faridhosseini | 12/12 | G-PE | − | Overall QoL | Mean 3.12 (s.d. = 2.34) | |
| Cuhadar | 24/23 | G-PE | – | Emotional functioning | ||
| Mental functioning | ||||||
| Sexual functioning | ||||||
| Feelings of stigmatisation | ||||||
| Introversion | ||||||
| Domestic relationships | ||||||
| Relations with friends | ||||||
| Participating in social activities | ||||||
| Daily and recreational activities | ||||||
| Taking initiative and using one's potential | ||||||
| Work | ||||||
| Kurdal | 40/40 | G-PE | 3 | Emotional functioning | ||
| Intellectual functioning | ||||||
| Sexual functioning | ||||||
| Feelings of stigmatisation | ||||||
| Social withdrawal | ||||||
| Household relations | ||||||
| Relations with friends | ||||||
| Participating in social activities | ||||||
| Daily and recreational activities | ||||||
| Taking initiative and self-sufficiency | ||||||
| Occupation | ||||||
| Bahredar | 15/15/15 | G-PE | 6 | GAF score | ||
| Cardoso 2014 (Brazil) | 19/26 | G-PE | 6 | Functional capacity | ||
| Pain | ||||||
| General health status | ||||||
| Vitality | ||||||
| Social aspects | ||||||
| Emotional aspects | ||||||
| Mental health | ||||||
| de Barros | 28/18 | G-PE | 12 | Social domain | ES = 0.42 | |
| Environmental domain | ||||||
| Functioning | ES = 0.03 | |||||
| Clinical improvement patient view | ES = 0.35 | |||||
| Clinical improvement clinician view | ES = 0.04 | |||||
| Costa | 25/12 | G-CBT | 6 | Functional capacity | ||
| Pain | ||||||
| General health status | ||||||
| Vitality | ||||||
| Social aspects | ||||||
| Emotional aspects | ||||||
| Mental health |
I-PE, individual psychoeducation; TAU, treatment as usual; AMD, adjusted mean difference; SES, standardised effect size; VAS, visual analogue scale; G-PE, group psychoeducation; QoL, quality of life; GAF, Global Assessment of Functioning; ES, effect size; G-CBT, group cognitive–behavioural therapy; R2, squared value of correlation coefficient or the proportion of explained variation.
a. The comparison was made within arm and the reported result for the treatment group.