Efficacy of life goals collaborative care for bipolar disorder: A systematic review

Bipolar disorder remains a disabling mental health condition despite the availability of effective treatments. Collaborative chronic care models (CCMs) represent an evidence-based way to structure care for conditions like bipolar disorder. Life Goals Collaborative Care (LGCC) was designed specifical...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of affective disorders 2024-08, Vol.359, p.356-363
Hauptverfasser: Miller, Christopher J., Bailey, Hannah M., Abel, Erica A., Burgess, Claire M., Connolly, Samantha L., Franz, Aleda, Smith, Eric, Bauer, Mark S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Bipolar disorder remains a disabling mental health condition despite the availability of effective treatments. Collaborative chronic care models (CCMs) represent an evidence-based way to structure care for conditions like bipolar disorder. Life Goals Collaborative Care (LGCC) was designed specifically for bipolar disorder, featuring psychoeducation alongside collaborative components (e.g. nurse care management or expert psychiatric consultation). Despite the use of Life Goals across health systems, a systematic review summarizing its effectiveness has never been conducted. We conducted a systematic review of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of LGCC through December 2023 to help guide the field in treating bipolar disorder (PROSPERO: #404581). We evaluated study quality and outcomes in several symptom and quality of life domains. Ten articles describing eight studies met inclusion criteria. All studies featured group-based LGCC; most were compared to treatment as usual (TAU). Three of eight studies found LGCC to be associated with statistically significant effects for the prevention of manic episodes. Most studies finding positive effects featured additional collaborative care components beyond psychoeducation and were conducted in capitated healthcare systems. Limitations include: several types of potential bias in included studies; exclusion of observational studies of LGCC; lack of generalizability to pediatric populations; insufficient studies to conduct subgroup analyses; and low confidence in the quality of the evidence. In this systematic review, group-based LGCC demonstrated some positive effects for reducing mania recurrence; results for other outcome domains were equivocal. Future studies should investigate one-on-one LGCC, both in person and virtually, to enhance well-being for people with bipolar disorder. •Bipolar disorder frequently requires attention to psychoeducation and care coordination.•Life Goals Collaborative Care (LGCC) is a treatment approach featuring psychoeducation and collaborative care components.•Findings from this systematic review of LGCC suggest that it may reduce mania recurrence among people with bipolar disorder.•LGCC findings in other outcome domains, including depression and health-related quality of life, were less consistent.•Based on the included studies, confidence in the quality of the evidence was low, pointing to the need for further research.
ISSN:0165-0327
1573-2517
DOI:10.1016/j.jad.2024.05.058