Title: Section 5: Use of Antidepressants in Bipolar Disorder
1Section 5 Use of Antidepressants in Bipolar
Disorder
2Treatment of Bipolar Depression
- Fewer studies than for mania
- Limited approved treatments
- Antidepressants lack evidence and may cause mood
destabilization
Ghaemi SN, et al. J Clin Psychiatry.
200162565-569. Ghaemi SN, et al. Am J
Psychiatry. 2004161163-165.Muzina DJ,
Calabrese JR. Int J Neuropsychopharmacol.
20036285-291.
3Use of Antidepressants in Bipolar Disorder
- Bipolar disorder is associated with considerable
depressive morbidity - Risk-to-benefit ratio of antidepressants as
adjuncts to mood stabilizers is an area of
controversy and disagreement - Antidepressants may increase risk of iatrogenic
mania, mixed states, rapid cycling - APA 2002 guidelines recommend conservative use of
antidepressants - Although evidence of their safety and efficacy is
limited, antidepressants are commonly used in
treatment of bipolar depression
Hirschfeld RM et al. Presented at 156th American
Psychiatric Association Annual Meeting May
17-22, 2003 San Francisco, CA. Goldberg JF, et
al. Bipolar Disord. 20035407-420. American
Psychiatric Association. Practice Guidelines for
the Treatment of Patients With Bipolar Disorder.
2nd ed. Washington, DC American Psychiatric
Publishing Group 2002.
4Bipolar Depression and AntidepressantsGeneral
Clinical Guidelines and Risks
- Conservative approach to antidepressant use
- Risk of antidepressant induced mood-cycling in
about 1530 of patients - Mood stabilizers (lithium, lamotrigine) are
effective in acute and prophylactic treatment of
depression lithium is effective in suicide
prevention - Antidepressants should be reserved for severe
cases of acute bipolar depression and not used
routinely - Cost/risk benefit ratio for antidepressant
treatment of bipolar depression is unfavorable - Antidepressants should be discontinued after
recovery from depressive episode (mixed evidence
for this recommendation)
- American Psychiatric Association. Practice
Guidelines for the Treatment of Patients With
Bipolar Disorder. 2nd ed. Washington, DC
American Psychiatric Publishing Group 2002. - Ghaemi SN, et al. Bipolar Disord. 20035421-433.
- Ghaemi SN, et al. Am J Psychiatry.
2004161163-165.
5No Antidepressant Advantage For Paroxetine or
Imipramine If Lithium Levels Are Therapeutic
N 15 15 14 7 10 7
60
P NS
P 0.05
50
40
Responders per Hamilton Criterion 7
Li PBO
30
Li PAR
Li IMI
20
10
Switch Rates LiPBO 2.3 LiIMI 7.7 LiPAR 0
0
Overall Efficacy
Li 0.8 mEq/L
PBO Placebo PAR Paroxetine IMI Imipramine
Nemeroff CB, et al. Am J Psychiatry.
2001158906-912.
6Antidepressant Efficacy Stanley Network
N 32 42 37 15 22
22
68.8
71.0
62.5
55.3
With CGI 1 or 2
48.5
43.0
Leverich GS, et al. Am J Psychiatry.
2006163232-239.
7Time Until Switch With Antidepressants Stanley
Bipolar Network
1.0
0.8
P 0.03
0.6
Cumulative Proportion Without a Switch
0.5
0.2
Patients with bipolar I disorder (N 115)
Patients with bipolar II disorder (N 44)
Censored
0.0
200
300
100
400
500
0
Time to Switch (days)
Leverich GS, et al. Am J Psychiatry.
2006163232-239.
8Ratio of Threshold Switches to Subthreshold Brief
Hypomanias
4.0
More Threshold Than Subthreshold Phenomena
3.5
3.0
2.5
Ratio of Threshold Switches to Subthreshold Brief
Hypomanias
2.0
1.5
1.0
More Subthreshold Than Threshold Phenomena
Bupropion
0.5
Sertraline
Venlafaxine
0.0
Acute Antidepressant Trials (10 weeks)
Continuation Antidepressant Trials ( 1 year)
Leverich GS, et al. Am J Psychiatry.
2006163232-239.
9Maintenance Antidepressants in Bipolar Disorder
- Maintenance antidepressants efficacy has not been
established in bipolar disorder - Increased cycling on antidepressants has been
shown in three placebo-controlled studies - When antidepressants are used in acute therapy,
taper and discontinue them after recovery from
depression - Maintain antidepressants only in those who
repeatedly relapse soon after discontinuation
(about 20 of bipolar patients)
Ghaemi SN, et al. Bipolar Disord. 20035421-433.
10TIMA 2005 Bipolar Acute Depression
Stage 1
OtherAntimanic
No Antimanic, Severe or Recent Mania
No Antimanic,No Severe or Recent Mania
Taking Li
(Increase Li to 0.8 mEq/L)
(continue)
Antimanic Lamotrigine
Lamotrigine
- Lamotrigine is a mood stabilizer not antimanic
- Lithium is an antimanic
- If history of recent or severe mania, add or
optimize antimanic - Otherwise, lamotrigine monotherapy may be
appropriate
Suppes T, et al. J Clin Psychiatry.
200566870-886.
11TIMA 2005 Bipolar Acute Depression
Partial Response or Nonresponse
Stage 2
Quetiapine or Olanzapine-Fluoxetine
Response
Partial Response or Nonresponse
CONT
Stage 3
Combination from Li, LTG, QTP, or OFC
- Designed to minimize cycle risk
- Note no anticonvulsant except LTG until Stage 4
- Overlap and taper
- Follow ADA guidelines regarding metabolic
monitoring
Suppes T, et al. J Clin Psychiatry.
200566870-886.
12TIMA 2005 Bipolar Acute Depression
Response
CONT
Partial Response Or Nonresponse
Li, LTG, QTP, OFC, VPA, or CBZ SSRI, BUP, or
VEN or ECT
Stage 4
- Combinations (OFC combinations 3 drugs)
- Lamotrigine should not be combined with AD
without antimanic - Includes VPA and CBZ at this point
- SSRIs include CTP, FLX, PRX, SRT, and FLV
- Some advocate the use of AD earlier but
evidence is lacking - Venlafaxine associated with more mania
induction
BUP bupropion CBZ carbamazepine CTP
citalopram ECT electroconvulsive therapy Li
lithium LTG lamotrigine OFC
olanzapine-fluoxetine combination QTP
quetiapine SSRI selective serotonin reuptake
inhibitor VEN venlafaxine VPA
valproate Suppes T, et al. J Clin Psychiatry.
200566870-886.
13Bipolar Depression and Antidepressants General
Guidelines and Risks
- Always use mood stabilizer in bipolar I patients,
even while depressed - Promptly wean the antidepressant if evidence of
hypomania or mania emerges - Antidepressants may trigger mania (mood
destabilization) or accelerate mood cycle - Up to 33 of patients with bipolar disorder may
be susceptible to antidepressant-induced manias - Possibly less efficacious in bipolar than
unipolar depression - Few standard antidepressants have been studied in
bipolar depression
Dantzler A, Osser DN. Psychiatr Ann.
199929270-284. Frances AJ, et al. J Clin
Psychiatry. 199859(suppl 4)73-79. Goldberg JF,
Ernst CL. J Clin Psychiatry. 200263985-991. Gold
berg JF, Truman CJ. Bipolar Disord.
20035407-420. Möller HJ, et al. J Affect
Disord. 200167141-146.
14Complicated Bipolar Relapse
15Presentation
- 32-year-old female
- Brought to ER by police
- Family called 911 after altercation at
- home escalated
16History of Present Illness
- Sister tells ER doctor that patient has been
getting more irritable for last 6 weeks - Missed outpatient psychiatrist appointment 2
weeks ago - Spent disability check and couldn't afford to
fill prescription - Sister suspects patient has started abusing
cocaine again
17Past Psychiatric History
- Diagnosed with bipolar disorder at age 21
- 5 prior hospitalizations (3 manic episodes, 2
depressive episodes with suicidality) - Sporadic outpatient attendance with partial
medication - compliance
- Responded to lithium, but patient discontinued
due to - tremor
- Responded to valproic acid, but patient
discontinued - due to weight gain
- Noncompliance associated with cocaine abuse
18Recent Psychiatric History
- More irritable
- Feels her sister is checking on her too much
- Feels she can make a new start and called
- CNN and NBC seeking audition as newscaster
- Poor sleep pattern
19Past Medical History
- Hypertension
- Obesity (BMI 32)
- Gallstone surgery
20Social and Family History
- Social History
- Cigarette smoker
- 2 DUIs
- On disability for bipolar disorder
- Family History
- Mother has bipolar disorder
- First cousin committed suicide
- Patient has longstanding difficulties in her
family relationship - Divorced twice
- 1 child has ADHD, 1 cousin with bipolar disorder
21Mental Status Examination
- Intoxicated and irritable in ER
- Angry with her sister, vague threats (she
better - watch out if she continues to be so pushy)
- Speech pressured
- Tells ER doctor she doesn't want to be
hospitalized because she is setting up interview
with CNN - If she doesn't get the job, it will be over
22Differential Diagnosis
- Bipolar disorder, manic relapse
- Polysubstance abuse
23Laboratory Tests
- Urinary drug screen positive for cocaine,
benzodiazepines - Pregnancy test negative
- Glucose and triglycerides normal
- Cholesterol mildly elevated
- Liver function tests normal
24Clinical Course
- Initially refuses admission and becomes
- belligerent in ER
- Calmed by intramuscular (IM) injection of
- antipsychotic
- Later on required a second IM injection and
admitted to the hospital - Still irritable, pressured in speech, and
sleeping - 3 hours a night
- Quetiapine started with gradual titration to
- 600 mg/day
25Clinical Course (cont)
- Patient decided to try lithium monotherapy for
outpatient care - Becomes more agreeable and engaged in treatment
- Reluctantly agrees to aftercare substance abuse
day program - Says she'll take her medications but that "they
better not make me fatter"
26Case Summary
- Female with dual diagnosis bipolar disorder I
- Cardiovascular/weight comorbidities
- Intermittent noncompliance and substance abuse
underlie poor long-term course and heightened
risk of injurious behavior - Doctor's capacity to achieve persistent clinical
stability strongly influenced by patient's
perceived effectiveness (risk versus benefit
appraisal) of medications
27Key Messages
- Therapeutic engagement is a critical first step
to treatment adherence - Careful assessment of
- Medical and psychiatric comorbidities in bipolar
disorder - Treatment options (agents, formulations) in
managing acutely agitated bipolar patients - Treatment goals (choice agents, risk-benefit
appraisal) in stabilization of bipolar patients - Treatment priorities, decisions, and transition
to outpatient maintenance therapy
28The Bland Chef
29History
- 37-year-old single female, without children,
employed as a chef at a local hotel - Chief complaint Im depressed and wired
- Diminished interest in her work, which she
previously was passionate about - No suicidal ideation
- Hyperphagia, hypersomnia, racing thoughts, feels
anxious and hyper, irritable with friends,
severe premenstrual worsening - Mood instability admixed with nonrefreshing
sleep, led to previous diagnosis of major
depression
30History of Present Illness
- Current episode began approximately six months
ago in the absence of identifiable interpersonal
stressors - Confluence of depressive symptoms, increasing
severity - Has noted decreased sleep by approximately 12
hours on occasion my mind wont stop when my
head hits the pillow - Has noted panic attacks, generalized anxiety, and
mood lability woven into depressive symptoms, no
suicidal ideation, psychotic features, alcohol or
substance abuse
31History of Present Illness (cont)
- Although patient maintains normal working hours,
spends less time creating new menu items - On days off, has been exercising less and
becoming socially withdrawn - Current antidepressant, an SSRI, offers minimal
symptom relief and may even worsen my anxiety - Adherent with medication prescribed 8 weeks ago
32Past Psychiatric History
- Recalls being anxious as a child
- No externalizing behavioral disorder or history
of trauma - Index depressive episode as sophomore, age 21
after breakup with boyfriend - Depressive episodes typically last 24 months in
duration with suggestion of worsening in the fall
33Past Psychiatric History (cont)
- Has received three previous antidepressants, all
of which she described as not working - Further history reveals that previous
antidepressants worsened anxiety - Has been in therapy on one previous occasion for
three months, but my therapist didnt understand
me - Occasionally takes benzodiazepines when agitation
is severe - No prior hospitalization
34Recent Psychiatric History
- Prior to onset of current depression, patient was
awarded Chef of the Year by local state licensing
board - Was spending most of her social time with friends
and had recently joined a book club - Was exercising on a regular basis, and planning a
mountain bike trip with friends
35Past Medical History
- Nonsmoker
- Allergic to penicillin
- History of migraines
- No diabetes, obesity, or heart disease
- Menstrual cycle has been chronically irregular
36Social and Family History
- Father has history of alcohol abuse, mother has
history of depression patient has two older
brothers - Does not know if brothers have been treated for
mental disorder, but refers to older brother as a
pot head - No family history of suicide or schizophrenia
- Born and raised in city currently resides in
- Close relationship with mother, father is
somewhat distant - No history of trauma
- Employed as chef for the past seven years
- Currently in a relationship for the past year
37Mental Status Examination
- Looks stated age although well groomed, appears
tired and fatigued - Speech slow, affect congruent with depressed
mood, decreased range normal thought form no
suicidal ideation preoccupied with diminished
interest in her career good insight no gross
impairment of judgment or cognition
38Differential Diagnosis
- Major depressive disorder
- Bipolar spectrum disorder
- Anxiety disorder comorbidity
- Mood disorder due to a general medical condition
- Substance induced mood disorder
39Laboratory Tests
- CBC, electrolytes, renal and liver function all
within normal range - TSH above medium but within normal range
- Normal blood glucose and lipids
- BMI 26
40Clinical Course
- Diagnosis of bipolar NOS was applied due to a
lack of history of hypomania - Antidepressant discontinued
- Divalproex refused, concern regarding polycystic
ovarian syndrome - Lamotrigine initiated, but discontinued after
rash despite benign appearance of cutaneous
reaction - Olanzapine 10 mg/day provided as mood
stabilizer - Cognitive behavioral therapy provided to target
subsyndromal depressive symptoms - Exercise encouraged
- Symptom burden considerably reduced, need for
antidepressants in the future was required
intermittently
41Case Summary
- 37-year-old female presenting with depression,
previously diagnosed with major depressive
disorder - Suboptimal trials of antidepressants
- Anxiety and medical comorbidity overlap
- Atypical/seasonal depressive pattern
- Depressive symptoms presage medical service
utilization - Menstrual cycle exacerbation
42Key Messages
- Bipolar spectrum disorder (BSD) presenting as
depression symptoms/episodes - Most individuals with BSD underrecognized and/or
diagnosed with depression - Anxiety and medical comorbidity differentially
affect individuals with BSD - Antidepressants not reliable treatments in BSD,
potentially harmful - All depressive presentations to be screened for
BSD