Longitudinal trajectories and associated baseline predictors in youths with bipolar spectrum disorders
- PMID: 24874203
- PMCID: PMC4164021
- DOI: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2014.13121577
Longitudinal trajectories and associated baseline predictors in youths with bipolar spectrum disorders
Abstract
Objective: The authors sought to identify and evaluate longitudinal mood trajectories and associated baseline predictors in youths with bipolar disorder.
Method: A total of 367 outpatient youths (mean age, 12.6 years) with bipolar disorder with at least 4 years of follow-up were included. After intake, participants were interviewed on average 10 times (SD=3.2) over a mean of 93 months (SD=8.3). Youths and parents were interviewed for psychopathology, functioning, treatment, and familial psychopathology and functioning.
Results: Latent class growth analysis showed four different longitudinal mood trajectories: "predominantly euthymic" (24.0%), "moderately euthymic" (34.6%), "ill with improving course" (19.1%), and "predominantly ill" (22.3%). Within each class, youths were euthymic on average 84.4%, 47.3%, 42.8%, and 11.5% of the follow-up time, respectively. Multivariate analyses showed that better course was associated with higher age at onset of mood symptoms, less lifetime family history of bipolar disorder and substance abuse, and less history at baseline of severe depression, manic symptoms, suicidality, subsyndromal mood episodes, and sexual abuse. Most of these factors were more noticeable in the "predominantly euthymic" class. The effects of age at onset were attenuated in youths with lower socioeconomic status, and the effects of depression severity were absent in those with the highest socioeconomic status.
Conclusions: A substantial proportion of youths with bipolar disorder, especially those with adolescent onset and the above-noted factors, appear to be euthymic over extended periods. Nonetheless, continued syndromal and subsyndromal mood symptoms in all four classes underscore the need to optimize treatment.
Conflict of interest statement
The other authors report no financial relationships with commercial interests.
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Comment in
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Symptom outcome in early-onset bipolar disorder: could be better, could be worse.Am J Psychiatry. 2014 Sep;171(9):910-2. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2014.14050677. Am J Psychiatry. 2014. PMID: 25178746 No abstract available.
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