Solomon David A, Leon Andrew C, Coryell William H, Endicott Jean, Li Chunshan, Fiedorowicz Jess G, Boyken Lara, Keller Martin B
UpToDate, Inc, Waltham, Massachusetts, USA.
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2010 Apr;67(4):339-47. doi: 10.1001/archgenpsychiatry.2010.15.
The phenomenology of bipolar I disorder affects treatment and prognosis.
To describe the duration of bipolar I mood episodes and factors associated with recovery from these episodes.
Subjects with Research Diagnostic Criteria bipolar I disorder were prospectively followed up for as long as 25 years. The probability of recovery over time from multiple successive mood episodes was examined with survival analytic techniques, including a mixed-effects grouped-time survival model.
Five US academic medical centers.
Two hundred nineteen subjects with bipolar I disorder.
Level of psychopathology was assessed with the Longitudinal Interval Follow-up Evaluation every 6 months for the first 5 years of follow-up and annually thereafter.
The median duration of bipolar I mood episodes was 13 weeks. More than 75% of the subjects recovered from their mood episodes within 1 year of onset. The probability of recovery was significantly less for an episode with severe onset (psychosis or severe psychosocial impairment in week 1 of the episode) (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.746; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.578-0.963; P = .02) and for subjects with greater cumulative morbidity (total number of years spent ill with any mood episode) (HR = 0.917; 95% CI, 0.886-0.948; P < .001). Compared with the probability of recovery from a major depressive episode, there was a significantly greater probability of recovery from an episode of mania (HR = 1.713; 95% CI, 1.373-2.137; P < .001), hypomania (HR = 4.502; 95% CI, 3.466-5.849; P < .001), or minor depression (HR = 2.027; 95% CI, 1.622-2.534; P < .001) and, conversely, a significantly reduced probability of recovery from a cycling episode (switching from one pole to the other without an intervening period of recovery) (HR = 0.438; 95% CI, 0.351-0.548; P < .001).
The median duration of bipolar I mood episodes was 13 weeks, and the probability of recovery was significantly decreased for cycling episodes, mood episodes with severe onset, and subjects with greater cumulative morbidity.
双相I型障碍的现象学影响治疗和预后。
描述双相I型心境发作的持续时间以及与这些发作恢复相关的因素。
对符合研究诊断标准的双相I型障碍患者进行长达25年的前瞻性随访。采用生存分析技术,包括混合效应分组时间生存模型,研究多次连续心境发作随时间恢复的概率。
美国五家学术医疗中心。
219例双相I型障碍患者。
在随访的前5年中,每6个月使用纵向间隔随访评估对精神病理学水平进行评估,此后每年评估一次。
双相I型心境发作的中位持续时间为13周。超过75%的患者在发作后1年内从心境发作中恢复。严重发作(发作第1周出现精神病或严重社会心理损害)的发作恢复概率显著降低(风险比[HR]=0.746;95%置信区间[CI],0.578-0.963;P=0.02),累积发病率较高(因任何心境发作患病的总年数)的患者恢复概率也显著降低(HR=0.917;95%CI,0.886-0.948;P<0.001)。与从重度抑郁发作恢复的概率相比,从躁狂发作(HR=1.713;95%CI,1.373-2.137;P<0.001)、轻躁狂发作(HR=4.502;95%CI,3.466-5.849;P<0.001)或轻度抑郁发作(HR=2.027;95%CI,1.622-2.534;P<0.001)恢复的概率显著更高,相反,从循环发作(从一极转换到另一极且无中间恢复期)恢复的概率显著降低(HR=0.438;95%CI,0.351-0.548;P<0.001)。
双相I型心境发作的中位持续时间为13周,循环发作、严重发作的心境发作以及累积发病率较高的患者恢复概率显著降低。