Relationship of Mania Symptomatology to Maintenance Treatment Response with Divalproex, Lithium, or Placebo: Clinical Research

Euphoric and mixed (dysphoric) manic symptoms have different response patterns to divalproex and lithium in acute mania treatment, but have not been studied in relationship to maintenance treatment outcomes. We examined the impact of initial euphoric or dysphoric manic symptomatology on maintenance...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuropsychopharmacology (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2005-10, Vol.30 (10), p.1932-1939
Hauptverfasser: Bowden, Charles L, Collins, Michelle A, McElroy, Susan L, Calabrese, Joseph R, Swann, Alan C, Weisler, Richard H, Wozniak, Patricia J
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container_end_page 1939
container_issue 10
container_start_page 1932
container_title Neuropsychopharmacology (New York, N.Y.)
container_volume 30
creator Bowden, Charles L
Collins, Michelle A
McElroy, Susan L
Calabrese, Joseph R
Swann, Alan C
Weisler, Richard H
Wozniak, Patricia J
description Euphoric and mixed (dysphoric) manic symptoms have different response patterns to divalproex and lithium in acute mania treatment, but have not been studied in relationship to maintenance treatment outcomes. We examined the impact of initial euphoric or dysphoric manic symptomatology on maintenance outcome. Randomized maintenance treatment with divalproex, lithium, or placebo was provided for 372 bipolar I patients, who met improvement criteria during open phase treatment for an index manic episode. The current analysis grouped patients according to the index manic episode subtype (euphoric or dysphoric), and evaluated the impact on maintenance treatment outcome. The rate of early discontinuation due to intolerance during maintenance treatment was higher for initially dysphoric patients ( N =249) than euphoric patients ( N =123; 15.7 vs 7.3%, respectively; p =0.032). Both lithium (23.2%) and divalproex (17.1%) were associated with more premature discontinuations due to intolerance than placebo (4.8%; p =0.003 and 0.02, respectively) in the initially dysphoric patients. Among initially euphoric patients, treatment with lithium was associated with significantly more premature discontinuations due to intolerance compared to placebo (18.2 vs 0%; p =0.03), and divalproex was significantly ( p =0.05) more effective than lithium, but not placebo in delaying time to a depressive episode. Initial euphoric mania appeared to predispose to better outcomes on indices of depression and overall function with divalproex maintenance than with either placebo or lithium. Dysphoric mania appeared to predispose patients to more side effects when treated with either divalproex or lithium during maintenance therapy.
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subjects Behavioral Sciences
Biological Psychology
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Neurosciences
original-article
Pharmacotherapy
Psychiatry
title Relationship of Mania Symptomatology to Maintenance Treatment Response with Divalproex, Lithium, or Placebo: Clinical Research
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