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Address correspondence to Frederick T. Lewis, DO, Deputy Director of Research, CNS Clinical Research Group, 8100 Royal Palm Blvd, Coral Springs, FL 33065-5733.E-mail: flewisdo{at}bellsouth.net
With the recent awareness of the bipolar spectrum, the interest and concern of physicians regarding the depressive side of bipolar disorder has emerged. Depression is the modal phase of bipolar disorder, as well as the phase that imparts the greatest risk for suicide. Despite these realities, little is known about the management of bipolar depression and much of what is known is complicated by conflicting reports regarding the use of antidepressants as either short- or long-term treatment modalities. This fear among physicians of complicating a patient's course secondary to antidepressant use combined with the fact that presently available mood stabilizers are less than reliable antidepressants has resulted in far more questions about management than answers. This article explores the clinical issues involving the depressive states, reviews some of the emerging data, and, it is hoped, lends some guidance regarding treatment options.
These expanded concepts of bipolar disorder, an illness that is estimated to affect 2.3 million adults in the United States, have led to a reassessment of its lifetime prevalence rate, currently estimated at 3.7%.1,2 Despite this emerging information, many physicians believe the idea of failing to recognize a patient having this illness to be counterintuitive. How could a physician miss noticing the symptoms of bipolar disorder in a patient currently having an episode of mania or hypomania? Yet, bipolar disorder in most affected patients is initially misdiagnosed, the most common misdiagnosis being unipolar major depression.3 These data, supported by similar results from other studies, support the notion that physicians face a great challenge in recognizing patients with bipolar disorder.4-6
This monumental failure at recognizing patients with bipolar disorder is attributable to a number of factors. Although physicians are trained to evaluate patients for evidence of episodes of mania or hypomania, patients frequently do not perceive these episodes as illness and therefore deny the symptoms on questioning. Additionally, patients may fail to endorse symptoms on screening instruments or fail to seek care during episodes.7 A second factor is that in patients with bipolar disorder, initial as well as early subsequent episodes of mood change are more commonly depressive episodes, rather than manic or hypomanic episodes. This factor may lead physicians to assume a diagnosis of unipolar depression.
Primary care physicians have been trained to believe that the prevalence of bipolar disorder is rare, particularly in outpatient settings, compared with the prevalence of unipolar disorder. In fact, bipolar disorder is common, affecting an estimated 30% of patients with depression seen in primary care settings.8 The modal phase of bipolar disorder is depression. It is this phase, most closely associated with social and occupational dysfunction, as well as an increased risk of suicidal thinking and behavior, that may prompt a patient to seek treatment. Finally, a diagnosis of bipolar disorder may be delayed or masked by complications from other psychiatric comorbidities, particularly substance abuse, anxiety disorders, and migraine syndromes.
As experts continue to explore the vicissitudes of bipolar disorder to refine definitions of the bipolar spectrum, one fact is clear: Depression, with its abundant medical, social, and occupational consequences, is the phase of bipolar disorder that most often confronts primary care physicians in outpatient practice. Consequently, physicians treating patients with that phase must exert efforts toward sensitivity to the recognition of bipolar depression, as well as focused strategies for its acute and long-term management.
| Recognizing Patients With Bipolar Depression |
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Although early diagnosis of bipolar disorder can be difficult for even the most experienced physicians, there are diagnostic clues that primary care physicians can incorporate into their clinical assessments to raise sensitivity to the disorder. The first, and most important, step is to consider bipolar disorder within the differential diagnosis when assessing a patient with complaints of mood change (Figure 1). As physicians remember that unipolar depression is a diagnosis of exclusion, their recognition of bipolar depression, as well as mood disorders secondary to medical conditions and substance use disorders, will improve.9
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Other presenting or classic symptoms suggestive of bipolar disorder include hypersomnia, psychomotor retardation, abrupt onset, termination of episodes (eg, "mood swings," postpartum episodes of depression), and the presence of comorbidities (eg, substance abuse, anxiety disorders, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder [ADHD]).10
The final consideration is patients' prior response to treatment. The antidepressant refractory depression rate is reported to be as high as between 30% and 40%.14 Part of the explanation for this astonishing treatment failure rate can be attributed to a lack of diagnostic precision. Antidepressant failure or adverse reactions while patients are on antidepressant therapy can be important clues leading to a diagnosis of bipolar disorder, as patients with bipolar disorder generally do poorly on antidepressant monotherapy. In fact, tricyclic antidepressant agents have long been associated with induction of mania, hypomania, and cycle acceleration when used alone as treatment.15
It appears from other data, however, that selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and bupropion hydrochloride impart much less risk.16 Nonetheless, antidepressant monotherapy, regardless of the agent chosen, is contraindicated in patients with bipolar depression. The use of a safer antidepressant (eg, SSRIs, bupropion hydrochloride) in combination with a mood stabilizer, however, can be highly effective. This efficacy is evidenced by the recent US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of the olanzapine-fluoxetine hydrochloride combination for the treatment of patients with acute bipolar depression.17
In addition to the five points of the bipolar disorder diagnostic star, physicians should consider other features in the evaluation of patients with depression. Given the seriousness of the symptomatology, as well as the high recurrence rate and progression of this disorder versus unipolar disorders, physicians should expect to find significant social and occupational dysfunction (Table). This finding is frequently evidenced by multiple failed interpersonal relationships, erratic career or job performance, financial difficulties, and legal problems, as well as serious high-risk behavior. Additionally, physicians should suspect bipolar disorder in patients who have antidepressant-refractory anxiety disorders, particularly panic and social anxiety disorder, as well as prior or active substance abuse.11
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A new, patient-rated screening instrument for bipolar I and II disorders, the Mood Disorder Questionnaire (MDQ) is available.18 (A version derived from the original MDQ is available as a pdf file for downloading on the Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance's Web site at: http://www.dbsalliance.org/questionnaire/screening_intro.asp). This instrument has been validated on an outpatient psychiatric population and found to have a sensitivity of approximately 70% and a specificity of 90%. A patient with depression endorsing 7 or more of the 13 items contained in question 1 of the questionnaire would suggest a diagnosis of bipolar disorder. The patient must then acknowledge on questions 2 and 3 that the symptoms endorsed in question 1 have co-occurred and admit that the symptoms have resulted in at least moderate social or occupational problems. In a busy clinical practice, this timesaving instrument can be a tremendous aid in diagnosis. Its use in mental health settings, as well as in primary care settings, should be strongly encouraged.
| Management of Patients With Bipolar Depression |
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Lithium, which received FDA approval more than 30 years ago, only has indication for the treatment of patients with acute mania and for the maintenance of response. The most commonly used mood stabilizers, lithium and divalproex sodium, have demonstrated only modest antidepressant effects when used as monotherapy in patients with bipolar depression (Figure 3).
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Lithium, however, has been systematically investigated as maintenance treatment for patients with bipolar disorder, including two 18-month, placebo-controlled studies versus lamotrigine.21 Most available data support lithium's ability to prevent both manic and depressive relapse, though the drug is clearly more effective at preventing mania than depression. In fact, in two comparison studies with lamotrigine, lithium prolonged time to manic relapse but was no better than placebo at prolonging time to depressive relapse.21
With respect to safety and tolerability issues, lithium has a black box warning for a narrow therapeutic index, making routine serum monitoring essential. Lithium is pregnancy category D, and it is commonly associated with weight gain, tremor, acne, hypothyroidism, and renal impairment.
Anticonvulsants
Much of the interest in the use of anticonvulsants for the treatment of
patients with bipolar disorder grew out of reports regarding the efficacy of
carbamazepine in the treatment of patients with acute mania. A
controlled-release formulation of the drug may, in fact, eventually receive an
indication for acute mania. Unfortunately, researchers have not initiated
large systematic investigations of carbamazepine as treatment for patients
with depression associated with bipolar disorder or for maintenance. The
limited data available reveal only modest acute antidepressant effects
associated with carbamazepine in
monotherapy.22 In a
study by Griel et
al23 that compares
the maintenance effect of carbamazepine with lithium for 30 months, lithium
had a statistically significant advantage. Overall, carbamazepine appears to
have limited utility in the management of patients with bipolar disorder.
Since receiving registration for the treatment of patients with acute mania in 1995, divalproex has become the most widely prescribed mood stabilizer in the United States. Interestingly, divalproex has not been investigated in large placebo-controlled trials of patients with depression. Further, the results of one small pilot study by Sachs et al24 failed to statistically separate divalproex from placebo, and the results of open-label trials with the drug reveal only modest antidepressant effects.25 Bowden et al26 conducted a large placebo-controlled study of divalproex versus lithium as maintenance treatment for patients with bipolar disorder. Results indicate a failed trial for both active treatment modalities.26 Despite lackluster results as treatment or maintenance in patients with acute depression, the consensus among experts is that divalproex possesses at least modest antidepressant effects in both acute depression and maintenance treatment.27
Tolerability and safety issues with divalproex include three black box warnings, including risks of neural tube defects in pregnant women. The drug is more commonly associated with weight gain, gastrointestinal disturbances, and hair loss.
Lamotrigine is a novel anticonvulsant that recently received FDA approval for maintenance treatment of patients with bipolar disorder, based on the strength of two 18-month placebo-controlled trials of lamotrigine versus lithium.21 In both studies, lithium was more effective than lamotrigine at preventing manic relapse; however, lamotrigine was superior to lithium at preventing depressive relapse. Additionally, lamotrigine has been studied in patients with acute bipolar depression in two large placebo-controlled trials. The results of both trials demonstrated statistically significant separation over placebo on the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale.28 Lamotrigine clearly possesses antidepressant efficacy. Failed trials in acute mania, however, as well as the drug's failure to prevent manic relapse in maintenance studies, indicate that lamotrigine cannot be considered a bidirectional mood stabilizer. Ultimately, lamotrigine may become more important in the long-term management of patients with bipolar II disorder, in which depression is a more serious threat than hypomania. The drug may also serve as an adjunct treatment for maintenance in patients with bipolar I disorder.
Lamotrigine carries a black box warning for life-threatening rash, which necessitates a gradual titration of the drug to therapeutic doses to limit this risk. This slow titration severely limits the agent's potential use in patients who are acutely depressed. In addition to the risk of rash, lamotrigine has been associated with headache, nausea, and dizziness.
Other anticonvulsants, such as gabapentin and topiramate, have not demonstrated significant utility as monotherapy in controlled trials in patients with bipolar disorder. Interest continues, however, in the usefulness of topiramate as an adjunct treatment for the disorder.
Oxcarbazepine, a congener of carbamazepine, has generated interest because of its superior tolerability profile over carbamazepine. Unfortunately, no large systematic investigations into the drug's usefulness in patients with bipolar disorder have been conducted.
Antipsychotics
Drugs from the antipsychotic classes are often overlooked in discussions
regarding mood stabilizers. It is important to note, however, that
chlorpromazine was the first FDA-approved treatment for patients with acute
mania and that all conventional antipsychotics have demonstrated efficacy in
this phase of bipolar disorder. Conventional antipsychotic agents have not
been found to be useful as antidepressants, however, and have been found to
frequently exert a depressogenic effect. Therefore, all conventional
antipsychotics can be considered antimanic agents, but not bidirectional mood
stabilizers.
Atypical antipsychotic agents, however, appear to hold more promise as true mood stabilizers. During the mid-1970s, the first atypical antipsychotic, clozapine, was reported to exert bidirectional effects on mood. Since that time, numerous reports of clozapine's usefulness in the treatment of patients with bipolar disorder have appeared.29
Olanzapine, the atypical antipsychotic agent most closely related to clozapine, received FDA approval as a monotherapy agent for the treatment of patients with acute mania in 2000 and as an adjunct treatment to lithium or valproate sodium in 2003. More important than its usefulness in the treatment of patients with mania, olanzapine has demonstrated efficacy in maintenance in two large 12-month trials involving olanzapine versus placebo and olanzapine versus lithium.30,31
In the trial comparing it with placebo, olanzapine was statistically superior to placebo in depression and mania relapse rates. In the trial comparing it with lithium, olanzapine was statistically comparable to lithium at preventing depressive relapse and was statistically superior to lithium at preventing manic relapse. In 2004, based on the strength of these two trials, olanzapine received an FDA-approved indication for the maintenance of response in patients with bipolar disorder.
Olanzapine and the combination of olanzapine and fluoxetine were studied in two 8-week placebo-controlled registration trials to assess efficacy in patients with acute bipolar depression.17 In both studies, olanzapine monotherapy clearly exerted an early and sustained antidepressant effect. In contrast, the combination treatment of olanzapine and fluoxetine separated statistically from placebo at every visit including week 1. In addition, the combination treatment also separated from its component monotherapy of olanzapine at weeks 4 through 8.
Based on these investigations, the olanzapine-fluoxetine combination became the first FDA-approved treatment for patients with acute bipolar depression. In a short time, olanzapine has become the most thoroughly investigated molecule in bipolar disorder, resulting in four FDA indications. Therefore, olanzapine and the olanzapine-fluoxetine combination are reasonable for first-line treatment of patients with bipolar disorder for the following reasons: Ease of use, simple and flexible dosing, and established bidirectional efficacy in both acute phases, as well as in maintenance.
Olanzapine has no black box warnings, and routine blood monitoring is not necessary. The most frequent adverse events associated with olanzapine include somnolence, increased appetite, and weight gain.
Other atypical antipsychotic agents also are being studied in patients with bipolar disorder. Although risperidone and quetiapine fumarate received FDA approval as monotherapy and adjunct treatment for patients with acute mania, current evidence does not support their use in patients with acute bipolar depression or in maintenance.
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| Footnotes |
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| References |
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