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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Do patients with bipolar disorder and subsyndromal symptoms benefit from functional remediation? A 12-month follow-up study

Ramón Landin-romeroAngela IbañezMarta Rapado-castroPatricia Correa-ghisaysCelso ArangoVicente Balanzá-martínezAna María González-pintoBarbara SeguraJosé M. MenchónInmaculada Fuentes DuráEsther JimenezBenedikt L. AmannPilar A. SaizRafael Tabares-seisdedosJosé Luis Ayuso-mateosAnabel Martinez-aranAdriane RosaCaterina Del Mar BonnínPaz Garcia-portillaJose Sanchez-morenoJulio BobesBrisa SoléCristina VaroVieta EduardSara BarbeitoSilvia Alonso-lana

subject

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyBipolar Disordermedicine.medical_treatmentYoung Mania Rating Scalelaw.invention03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRandomized controlled trialRating scalelawmental disordersmedicinePsychoeducationHumansPharmacology (medical)Bipolar disorderBiological PsychiatryDepression (differential diagnoses)Psychiatric Status Rating ScalesPharmacologyAnalysis of VarianceChi-Square DistributionMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseCognitive Remediation030227 psychiatryPsychotherapyPsychiatry and Mental healthTreatment OutcomeMoodNeurologyPhysical therapyFemaleNeurology (clinical)PsychologyPsychosocial030217 neurology & neurosurgeryFollow-Up StudiesClinical psychology

description

We analyzed the efficacy of functional remediation, in a sample of patients with bipolar disorder who presented with subsyndromal symptoms. From a total sample of 239 patients with bipolar I and II disorder, according to DSM-IV-TR diagnostic criteria, entering a randomized clinical trial, those patients who presented with subsyndromal symptoms were selected based on a method already described by Berk and colleagues was applied. It consists of using the Clinical Global Impression-Bipolar version (CGI-BP) to establish the scores of the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D) and of the Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS) that correspond with 1 in the CGI-BP. Functional outcome and mood symptoms were assessed at 6 and at 12-month follow-up. A total of 99 patients were selected for this post-hoc analysis, allocated as follows: functional remediation (n=33); psychoeducation (n=37) and treatment as usual (TAU,n=29). The repeated-measures analyses at 12-month follow-up revealed a significant group x time interaction in favour of the patients who received functional remediation when compared to psychoeducation and TAU (F=2.93; p=0.02) at improving psychosocial functioning. Finally, mood symptoms did not significantly change in any of the three groups at any time of follow-up, as shown by the non-significant group x time interaction effect in HAM-D scores (F=1.57; p=0.18) and YMRS scores (F=1.51; p=0.20). Bipolar patients with subsyndromal symptoms improve their functional outcome when exposed to functional remediation regardless of the persistence of mood symptomatology.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euroneuro.2017.01.010