| Literature DB >> 31128591 |
Hailey Tremain1, Kathryn Fletcher2, Jan Scott2,3, Carla McEnery2,4,5, Michael Berk6,4,5,7, Greg Murray2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is great interest in the possibility that 'stage of illness' moderates treatment outcomes in bipolar disorder (BD). Much remains unknown about the construct of stage of illness, but there is evidence that effectiveness of psychosocial interventions may depend on factors that are plausible proxy measures of stage of illness (e.g., number of episodes). To date, reviews of this data have focused solely on clinical outcomes (particularly symptoms and relapse rates), but a range of recovery-focused outcomes (including functioning, cognitive functioning, and quality of life) have been measured in individuals with established BD. The aim of the proposed systematic review is to synthesise existing evidence for plausible proxy measures of stage of illness as moderators of recovery-focused and functional outcomes in psychosocial treatment studies of BD.Entities:
Keywords: Bipolar disorder; Clinical staging; Functioning; Moderator; Psychosocial interventions; Psychotherapy; Quality of life; Recovery; Stage of illness; Treatment
Year: 2019 PMID: 31128591 PMCID: PMC6535183 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-019-1042-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Plausible proxy measures for stage of illness relevant to this review
| Variables | |
|---|---|
| 1. Number of mood episodes [ | |
| 2. Functioning/disability [ | |
| 3. Cognitive functioning/cognitive impairment/neurocognitive deficit [ | |
| 4. Comorbidities [ |
Outcome measures for the proposed review
| Outcome measure instruments | |
|---|---|
1. General/social functioning A multidimensional construct encompassing an individual’s capacity for independent living, occupational and educational achievement, interpersonal relationships and recreation [ | |
2. Cognitive functioning An individual’s range of abilities relating to cognition, memory and learning, including attention, executive function, verbal learning and memory, verbal fluency, processing speed, working memory, visual learning and memory, psychomotor speed, visuo-spatial ability) [ | |
3. Quality of life While quality of life is used in varying ways, the World Health Organisation defines this as “an individual’s perception of their position in life in the context of the culture and value systems in which they live and in relation to their goals, expectations, standards and concerns” [ |
Scopus search terms for the proposed review
| Search terms | |
|---|---|
TITLE-ABS-KEY (bipolar OR mania OR manic* OR “manic depress*”) AND TITLE-ABS-KEY (“psychological therap*” OR psychotherap* OR psychosocial OR “self-management” OR “Psychological intervention” OR cbt OR “cognitive therapy” OR “behavior therapy” OR “behavioural therapy” OR “cognitive behavioural” OR “cognitive behavior” OR mindfulness OR mbct OR “collaborative care” OR ipsrt OR “social rhythm” OR interpersonal OR “Acceptance and Commitment Therapy” OR “ACT” OR dbt OR “dialectical behaviour therapy” OR psychoeducation OR “family therapy” OR “family focused” OR carer OR “functional remediation” OR “cognitive remediation” OR “schema therapy”) AND TITLE-ABS-KEY (stage* OR staging OR predict* OR mediat* OR moderat* OR neurocognit* OR cognit* OR comorbid* OR episodes OR “number of episodes” OR function* OR trajectory OR “illness history” OR “illness characteristics” OR “course of illness”) AND TITLE-ABS-KEY (recovery OR “patient-reported outcomes” OR “quality of life” OR function* OR employment OR autonomy OR wellbeing OR social OR disability OR meaning OR vocation* OR cognit* OR acceptance OR self-compassion) |