Back to Search Start Over

Determinants of three-year clinical outcomes in real-world outpatients with bipolar disorder: The multicenter treatment survey for bipolar disorder in psychiatric outpatient clinics (MUSUBI)

Authors :
Norio Sugawara
Naoto Adachi
Yukihisa Kubota
Yoichiro Watanabe
Kazuhira Miki
Takaharu Azekawa
Koji Edagawa
Eiichi Katsumoto
Seiji Hongo
Eiichiro Goto
Hitoshi Ueda
Masaki Kato
Reiji Yoshimura
Atsuo Nakagawa
Toshiaki Kikuchi
Takashi Tsuboi
Koichiro Watanabe
Kazutaka Shimoda
Norio Yasui-Furukori
Source :
Journal of psychiatric research. 151
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

There is limited evidence regarding predictors of long-term clinical outcomes in patients with bipolar disorder (BD). The objective of this study was to describe 3-year clinical outcomes and identify their predictors from participants in the multicenter treatment survey for BD in psychiatric outpatient clinics (MUSUBI).The MUSUBI was a naturalistic study investigating patients with BD in real-world clinical practice. Our study extracted data regarding 1647 outpatients with BD from 2016, 2017, and 2019 as baseline, 1-year, and 3-year assessments. As clinical outcomes, we assessed the presence of time ill (depressive and manic) during the 1 year prior to the 3-year assessment and durable remission (53 weeks or more) prior to the 3-year assessment.Participants with durable remission prior to the 3-year assessment had significant associations with diagnosis of a personality disorder and duration of continuous remission at baseline. Regarding the presence of depressive symptoms during the 1 year prior to the 3-year assessment, work status, Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) scores, suicidal ideation, and duration of continuous remission at baseline had significant associations with this outcome.At the 3-year assessment, 19.3% of participants (318/1647) achieved durable remission, while 47.5% of them (782/1647) were not remitted. Our findings can help clinicians predict the illness course of BD by understanding demographic and clinical characteristics.

Details

ISSN :
18791379
Volume :
151
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of psychiatric research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0c10855ff22ad0e48c92eb0c1ff113de