Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, USA.
J Clin Psychiatry. 2013 Mar;74(3):e205-11. doi: 10.4088/JCP.12m08049.
To describe the duration of bipolar I major and minor depressive episodes and factors associated with time to recovery.
As part of the National Institute of Mental Health Collaborative Depression Study, 219 participants with bipolar I disorder based on Research Diagnostic Criteria analogs to DSM-IV-TR criteria were recruited at 5 academic medical centers from 1978 to 1981 and followed for up to 25 years with the Longitudinal Interval Follow-Up Evaluation. The probability of recovery over time from depressive episodes, the primary outcome measure, was examined with mixed-effects grouped-time survival models.
The median duration of major depressive episodes was 14 weeks, and over 70% of participants recovered within 12 months of episode onset. The median duration of minor depressive episodes was 8 weeks, and approximately 90% of participants recovered within 6 months of onset of the episode. Aggregated data demonstrated similar durations of the first 3 major depressive episodes. However, for each participant with multiple episodes of major depression or minor depression, the duration of each episode was not consistent (intraclass correlation coefficient = 0.07 and 0.25 for major and minor depression, respectively). The total number of years in episode over follow-up with major plus minor depression prior to onset of a major depressive episode was significantly associated with a decreased probability of recovery from that episode; with each additional year, the likelihood of recovery was reduced by 7% (hazard ratio = 0.93; 95% CI, 0.89-0.98; P = .002).
Bipolar I major depression generally lasts longer than minor depression, and the duration of multiple episodes within an individual varies. However, the probability of recovery over time from an episode of major depression appears to decline with each successive episode.
描述双相情感障碍 I 型重性和轻性抑郁发作的持续时间以及与恢复时间相关的因素。
作为美国国立精神卫生研究所合作性抑郁研究的一部分,于 1978 年至 1981 年在 5 个学术医疗中心,根据与 DSM-IV-TR 标准类似的研究诊断标准模拟物,招募了 219 名符合双相情感障碍 I 型诊断标准的参与者,并通过纵向间隔随访评估进行了长达 25 年的随访。主要结局指标是评估抑郁发作随时间恢复的可能性,采用混合效应分组时间生存模型进行分析。
重性抑郁发作的中位数持续时间为 14 周,超过 70%的参与者在发作后 12 个月内恢复。轻性抑郁发作的中位数持续时间为 8 周,约 90%的参与者在发作后 6 个月内恢复。汇总数据显示,前 3 次重性抑郁发作的持续时间相似。然而,对于每个有多次重性或轻性抑郁发作的参与者,每次发作的持续时间并不一致(重性和轻性抑郁的组内相关系数分别为 0.07 和 0.25)。在重性抑郁发作之前,随访期间有重性加轻性抑郁发作的总年数与从该次发作中恢复的可能性显著相关;每增加 1 年,恢复的可能性降低 7%(危险比=0.93;95%CI,0.89-0.98;P=0.002)。
双相情感障碍 I 型重性抑郁发作通常比轻性抑郁发作持续时间更长,个体内多次发作的持续时间也各不相同。然而,从发作中随时间恢复的可能性似乎随着每次连续发作而降低。