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Long-term lithium treatment in bipolar disorder: effects on glomerular filtration rate and other metabolic parameters

Authors :
Thomas Stamm
Gabriele Sani
Diego Hidalgo-Mazzei
Alberto Bocchetta
Martin Alda
Eduard Vieta
Bruno Müller-Oerlinghausen
Giuseppe Quaranta
Julia Veeh
Valerio Selle
Mirko Manchia
Gustavo H. Vazquez
Giulio Perugi
Michael Bauer
Philipp Ritter
Ross J. Baldessarini
Maria Abramowicz
Marco Pinna
Janusz K. Rybakowski
Cynthia V. Calkin
D. Reginaldi
Lorenza Bolzani
David Saiger
Leonardo Tondo
Andrea Murru
Andreas Reif
Caterina Chillotti
Source :
International Journal of Bipolar Disorders, Vol 5, Iss 1, Pp 1-12 (2017), International Journal of Bipolar Disorders
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Background Concerns about potential adverse effects of long-term exposure to lithium as a mood-stabilizing treatment notably include altered renal function. However, the incidence of severe renal dysfunction; rate of decline over time; effects of lithium dose, serum concentration, and duration of treatment; relative effects of lithium exposure vs. aging; and contributions of sex and other factors all remain unclear. Methods Accordingly, we acquired data from 12 collaborating international sites and 312 bipolar disorder patients (6142 person-years, 2669 assays) treated with lithium carbonate for 8–48 (mean 18) years and aged 20–89 (mean 56) years. We evaluated changes of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) as well as serum creatinine, urea–nitrogen, and glucose concentrations, white blood cell count, and body-mass index, and tested associations of eGFR with selected factors, using standard bivariate contrasts and regression modeling. Results Overall, 29.5% of subjects experienced at least one low value of eGFR ( 55; risk of ≥2 low values was 18.1%; none experienced end-stage renal failure. eGFR declined by 0.71%/year of age and 0.92%/year of treatment, both by 19% more among women than men. Mean serum creatinine increased from 0.87 to 1.17 mg/dL, BUN from 23.7 to 33.1 mg/dL, glucose from 88 to 122 mg/dL, and BMI from 25.9 to 26.6 kg/m2. By multivariate regression, risk factors for declining eGFR ranked: longer lithium treatment, lower lithium dose, higher serum lithium concentration, older age, and medical comorbidity. Later low eGFR was also predicted by lower initial eGFR, and starting lithium at age ≥ 40 years. Limitations Control data for age-matched subjects not exposed to lithium were lacking. Conclusions Long-term lithium treatment was associated with gradual decline of renal functioning (eGFR) by about 30% more than that was associated with aging alone. Risk of subnormal eGFR was from 18.1% (≥2 low values) to 29.5% (≥1 low value), requiring about 30 years of exposure. Additional risk factors for low eGFR were higher serum lithium level, longer lithium treatment, lower initial eGFR, and medical comorbidity, as well as older age.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Bipolar Disorders, Vol 5, Iss 1, Pp 1-12 (2017), International Journal of Bipolar Disorders
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dfce61223978f55b4943e2792137bf42