Incidence and distribution of first-episode mania by age: results from a 35-year study

Background. Few epidemiological studies have investigated incidence by age or age at onset distributions for mania or bipolar disorder. The current study aimed to determine these in a defined area in south-east London, over a 35-year period. Method. All cases of first-episode mania presenting to psy...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychological medicine 2005-06, Vol.35 (6), p.855-863
Hauptverfasser: KENNEDY, N., EVERITT, B., BOYDELL, J., VAN OS, J., JONES, P. B., MURRAY, R. M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background. Few epidemiological studies have investigated incidence by age or age at onset distributions for mania or bipolar disorder. The current study aimed to determine these in a defined area in south-east London, over a 35-year period. Method. All cases of first-episode mania presenting to psychiatric services in Camberwell, south-east London, between 1965 and 1999 were identified. Incidence rates by age, using 5-year age-at-onset bands, were estimated and the structure of the age-at-onset distribution for first-episode mania was investigated using finite mixture distributions (admixture analysis). Results. The incidence of DSM-IV bipolar I disorder (BP I), first manic episode peaked in early adult life (16·38/100000 population per year in the 21–25 years band) with a much smaller peak in mid-life. A two-component normal mixture distribution fitted age at onset better than either a single normal distribution or a three-component mixture, implying the existence of early and later onset subgroups. The early onset group had a stronger family history of bipolar disorder, and showed more acute, severe and atypical symptoms during their first manic episode. Conclusions. The incidence of mania peaks in early adult life but there is clear evidence of early and later onset subgroups which may represent different forms of disorder.
ISSN:0033-2917
1469-8978
DOI:10.1017/S0033291704003307