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Psychopathological and sociodemographic features in treatment-resistant unipolar depression versus bipolar depression: a comparative study

Authors :
Stefano Comai
Marie Saint-Laurent
Maykel F. Ghabrash
Allan Fielding
Eduard Dumitrescu
Linda Booij
John Tabaka
Nicolas A. Nuñez
Pablo Cervantes
Stephen Vida
Gabriella Gobbi
Nancy Low
Theodore Kolivakis
Nunez, N. A.
Comai, S.
Dumitrescu, E.
Ghabrash, M. F.
Tabaka, J.
Saint-Laurent, M.
Vida, S.
Kolivakis, T.
Fielding, A.
Low, N.
Cervantes, P.
Booij, L.
Gobbi, G.
Source :
BMC Psychiatry, Vol 18, Iss 1, Pp 1-11 (2018), BMC Psychiatry
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2018.

Abstract

Background Some authors have hypothesized that Treatment-Resistant Unipolar Depression (TRD-UP) should be considered within the bipolar spectrum disorders and that hidden bipolarity may be a risk factor for TRD-UP. However, there are neither studies comparing clinical and sociodemographic data of patients with TRD-UP versus Bipolar (BP) disorders nor are there any examining differences versus Bipolar type I (BP-I) and Bipolar type II (BP-II). Methods Charts analysis was conducted on 194 patients followed at the Mood Disorders Clinic of the McGill University Health Center. Sociodemographic, clinical features and depression scales were collected from patients meeting DSM-IV criteria for TRD-UP (n = 100) and BP (n = 94). Binary logistic regression analysis was conducted to examine clinical predictors independently associated with the two disorders. Results Compared to BP, TRD-UP patients exhibited greater severity of depression, prevalence of anxiety and panic disorders, melancholic features, Cluster-C personality disorders, later onset of depression and fewer hospitalizations. Binary logistic regression indicated that higher comorbidity with anxiety disorders, higher depression scale scores and lower global assessment of functioning (GAF) scores, and lower number of hospitalizations and psychotherapies differentiated TRD-UP from BP patients. We also found that the rate of unemployment and the number of hospitalizations for depression was higher in BP-I than in BP-II, while the rate of suicide attempts was lower in BP-I than in BP-II depressed patients. Conclusions These results suggest that TRD-UP constitutes a distinct psychopathological condition and not necessarily a prodromal state of BP depression.

Details

ISSN :
1471244X
Volume :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMC Psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a2b4329eba9c80ca3c2472d8bc2d6b96
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12888-018-1641-y