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Prospective cohort study of early biosignatures of response to lithium in bipolar-I-disorders: overview of the H2020-funded R-LiNK initiative

Authors :
Jan Scott
Diego Hidalgo-Mazzei
Rebecca Strawbridge
Allan Young
Matthieu Resche-Rigon
Bruno Etain
Ole A. Andreassen
Michael Bauer
Djamila Bennabi
Andrew M. Blamire
Fawzi Boumezbeur
Paolo Brambilla
Nadia Cattane
Annamaria Cattaneo
Marie Chupin
Klara Coello
Yann Cointepas
Francesc Colom
David A. Cousins
Caroline Dubertret
Edouard Duchesnay
Adele Ferro
Aitana Garcia-Estela
Jose Goikolea
Antoine Grigis
Emmanuel Haffen
Margrethe C. Høegh
Petter Jakobsen
Janos L. Kalman
Lars V. Kessing
Farah Klohn-Saghatolislam
Trine V. Lagerberg
Mikael Landén
Ute Lewitzka
Ashley Lutticke
Nicolas Mazer
Monica Mazzelli
Cristina Mora
Thorsten Muller
Estanislao Mur-Mila
Ketil Joachim Oedegaard
Leif Oltedal
Erik Pålsson
Dimitri Papadopoulos Orfanos
Sergi Papiol
Victor Perez-Sola
Andreas Reif
Philipp Ritter
Roberto Rossi
Thomas Schulze
Fanny Senner
Fiona E. Smith
Letizia Squarcina
Nils Eiel Steen
Pete E. Thelwall
Cristina Varo
Eduard Vieta
Maj Vinberg
Michele Wessa
Lars T. Westlye
Frank Bellivier
Source :
International Journal of Bipolar Disorders, Vol 7, Iss 1, Pp 1-10 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
SpringerOpen, 2019.

Abstract

Abstract Background Lithium is recommended as a first line treatment for bipolar disorders. However, only 30% of patients show an optimal outcome and variability in lithium response and tolerability is poorly understood. It remains difficult for clinicians to reliably predict which patients will benefit without recourse to a lengthy treatment trial. Greater precision in the early identification of individuals who are likely to respond to lithium is a significant unmet clinical need. Structure The H2020-funded Response to Lithium Network (R-LiNK; http://www.r-link.eu.com/) will undertake a prospective cohort study of over 300 individuals with bipolar-I-disorder who have agreed to commence a trial of lithium treatment following a recommendation by their treating clinician. The study aims to examine the early prediction of lithium response, non-response and tolerability by combining systematic clinical syndrome subtyping with examination of multi-modal biomarkers (or biosignatures), including omics, neuroimaging, and actigraphy, etc. Individuals will be followed up for 24 months and an independent panel will assess and classify each participants’ response to lithium according to predefined criteria that consider evidence of relapse, recurrence, remission, changes in illness activity or treatment failure (e.g. stopping lithium; new prescriptions of other mood stabilizers) and exposure to lithium. Novel elements of this study include the recruitment of a large, multinational, clinically representative sample specifically for the purpose of studying candidate biomarkers and biosignatures; the application of lithium-7 magnetic resonance imaging to explore the distribution of lithium in the brain; development of a digital phenotype (using actigraphy and ecological momentary assessment) to monitor daily variability in symptoms; and economic modelling of the cost-effectiveness of introducing biomarker tests for the customisation of lithium treatment into clinical practice. Also, study participants with sub-optimal medication adherence will be offered brief interventions (which can be delivered via a clinician or smartphone app) to enhance treatment engagement and to minimize confounding of lithium non-response with non-adherence. Conclusions The paper outlines the rationale, design and methodology of the first study being undertaken by the newly established R-LiNK collaboration and describes how the project may help to refine the clinical response phenotype and could translate into the personalization of lithium treatment.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21947511
Volume :
7
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
International Journal of Bipolar Disorders
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.57ee4627676f46439dd606349ebeed81
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40345-019-0156-x