Antidepros no bipolar help?
Last updated: Friday, March 30, 2007 PrintThe results suggest that treating with a mood stabiliser alone is preferable, a recommendation that goes against common practice.
"We really think that at the beginning of your treatment, it is very reasonable to have this 'mood-stabiliser-optimised' kind of approach, and what we've learned from this study is it makes sense to give that some time to work," said Dr Gary Sachs, lead author of the study, director of the bipolar clinic and research programme at Massachusetts General Hospital and associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School in Boston.
No benefit from antidepros"The patient loses nothing from that," Sachs added. "We did not show that any group benefited from having antidepressants added."
On the other hand, doubling up the medications did not confer any risk, Sachs's team reported in the March 29 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.
Treating bipolar disorder is never a one-size-fits-all proposition, however.
No one size fits all"It's hard to judge at the individual level because of individual variation," said Dr Christopher Colenda, dean of the Texas A&M Health Science Centre College of Medicine in College Station. "As a treating clinician, you may try single therapy for a while and, if it doesn't work, add the antidepressant. This study gives us a rational place to start and to make clinically relevant decisions."
Bipolar disorder is characterised by alternating swings of very high and very low - or depressed - moods, along with changes in energy and the ability to function.
The standard of care for bipolar disorder is treatment with a mood stabiliser such as lithium, valproate, carbamazepine or other medications that reduce mania.
Although antidepressants have never been approved to treat bipolar disorder, and although there is limited evidence as to their safety and efficacy, such medications are commonly prescribed in addition to a mood stabilizer.
May trigger manic episodesHowever, many researchers worry that antidepressants may even trigger a manic episode in bipolar patients.
"This practice is extremely prevalent," Sachs said. "The investigators agreed that the number one priority was resolving this issue, because there are two competing expert recommendations: a stabiliser plus an antidepressant or a stabiliser alone. We asked the question, 'Would two be better than one?' "
This trial, a collaboration with the US National Institutes of Mental Health, randomly assigned 336 individuals with bipolar disorder from "real world," clinical settings to take a mood stabiliser plus either an antidepressant (bupropion/Wellbutrin or paroxetine/Aropax) or a placebo.
After about 26 weeks, 23.5 percent of patients taking antidepressants had stayed well for at least eight weeks in a row vs. 27.3 percent of those taking a placebo. The difference was not statistically significant.
No benefit and no problems"In this study, we do not show a benefit nor a problem due to antidepressants," Sachs said. "We didn't show anything to gain. We also didn't show any harm, and there may well be individual patients who might respond to antidepressants and individual antidepressants that actually work better."
Also, about 10 percent of each group - with or without antidepressants - experienced the onset of mania.
Sachs was surprised by the finding. "I had firmly believed that antidepressants triggered mania," he said. "This is an important finding of the study. That's a real thing I have to take to heart."
Another expert said the study could change doctors' thinking.
"Treatment needs to be individualised, but, for the vast majority of patients, antidepressants don't offer critical benefit and may carry significant risk," said Dr Richard Weisler, adjunct professor of psychiatry at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and adjunct associate professor of psychiatry at Duke University Medical Centre in Durham, North Carolina.
Rethink neededOther studies have suggested that antidepressants do come with their own dangers, and, "if you've got those risks and little benefit, then we need to be rethinking how most clinicians are actually treating bipolar," Weisler said.
As early as next week, results regarding the effects of psychosocial treatments used in the trial will be released. And there will likely be many more papers from this set of data, Sachs said. – (HealthDayNews)
Read more:Riding the bipolar roller coaster
How is bipolar disorder treated?
March 2007
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