Cargando…

Bipolar disorders and suicide: stumbling twice with the same stone?

INTRODUCTION: Suicide is the most terrible outcome of bipolar disorders (BD). It impacts families and healthcare professionals deeply. Family history of suicide (FHS) is one of its main risk factors, whereas lithium treatment and absence of substance use disorders (SUD) are two of its few modifiable...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sagué-Vilavella, M., Fico, G., Anmella, G., Giménez-Palomo, A., Gómez-Ramiro, M., Pons Cabrera, M., Madero, S., Vieta, E., Murru, A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9567399/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2022.579
_version_ 1784809388955926528
author Sagué-Vilavella, M.
Fico, G.
Anmella, G.
Giménez-Palomo, A.
Gómez-Ramiro, M.
Pons Cabrera, M.
Madero, S.
Vieta, E.
Murru, A.
author_facet Sagué-Vilavella, M.
Fico, G.
Anmella, G.
Giménez-Palomo, A.
Gómez-Ramiro, M.
Pons Cabrera, M.
Madero, S.
Vieta, E.
Murru, A.
author_sort Sagué-Vilavella, M.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Suicide is the most terrible outcome of bipolar disorders (BD). It impacts families and healthcare professionals deeply. Family history of suicide (FHS) is one of its main risk factors, whereas lithium treatment and absence of substance use disorders (SUD) are two of its few modifiable protective factors. OBJECTIVES: To explore the relationship between FHS and clinical characteristics in BD. We hypothesized that FHS would be associated with less SUD, higher rates of lithium treatment and shorter duration of untreated illness (DUI). METHODS: Cross-sectional analysis of subjects with BD followed-up in a specialised outpatient unit (Barcelona, October’08-March’18). We described data with measures of frequency, central tendency and dispersion, and we used χ², Fisher’s test and t-tests for comparisons. RESULTS: The sample consisted of 83 subjects, 56.6% males, mean age 41.9 years (SD 12.7). 74.7% (n=62) had a diagnosis of BD-I and 25.3% (n=21) of BD-II. 11 subjects (13.3%) had FHS. Those with FHS did not show significant differences in sociodemographic data, DUI (58.5+/-60.4 vs 38.19+/-84.9 months, p=0.341), lithium use (72.7% vs 73.6%, p=0.95) or SUD (27.3% vs 23.6%, p=0.79). There were differences in terms of lifetime suicide attempts (54.5% vs 20.8%, p=0.026), family history of mental disorders (100% vs 69.4%, n=0.032). CONCLUSIONS: Contrary to our hypothesis, FHS was not associated with the modifiable protective factors against suicide (namely, less SUD and more lithium prescription). Similarly, we did not find an association with earlier access to mental health services at symptom onset (DUP as proxy). Therefore, our results suggest FHS does not modify attitudes towards prevention. DISCLOSURE: No significant relationships.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9567399
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Cambridge University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-95673992022-10-17 Bipolar disorders and suicide: stumbling twice with the same stone? Sagué-Vilavella, M. Fico, G. Anmella, G. Giménez-Palomo, A. Gómez-Ramiro, M. Pons Cabrera, M. Madero, S. Vieta, E. Murru, A. Eur Psychiatry Abstract INTRODUCTION: Suicide is the most terrible outcome of bipolar disorders (BD). It impacts families and healthcare professionals deeply. Family history of suicide (FHS) is one of its main risk factors, whereas lithium treatment and absence of substance use disorders (SUD) are two of its few modifiable protective factors. OBJECTIVES: To explore the relationship between FHS and clinical characteristics in BD. We hypothesized that FHS would be associated with less SUD, higher rates of lithium treatment and shorter duration of untreated illness (DUI). METHODS: Cross-sectional analysis of subjects with BD followed-up in a specialised outpatient unit (Barcelona, October’08-March’18). We described data with measures of frequency, central tendency and dispersion, and we used χ², Fisher’s test and t-tests for comparisons. RESULTS: The sample consisted of 83 subjects, 56.6% males, mean age 41.9 years (SD 12.7). 74.7% (n=62) had a diagnosis of BD-I and 25.3% (n=21) of BD-II. 11 subjects (13.3%) had FHS. Those with FHS did not show significant differences in sociodemographic data, DUI (58.5+/-60.4 vs 38.19+/-84.9 months, p=0.341), lithium use (72.7% vs 73.6%, p=0.95) or SUD (27.3% vs 23.6%, p=0.79). There were differences in terms of lifetime suicide attempts (54.5% vs 20.8%, p=0.026), family history of mental disorders (100% vs 69.4%, n=0.032). CONCLUSIONS: Contrary to our hypothesis, FHS was not associated with the modifiable protective factors against suicide (namely, less SUD and more lithium prescription). Similarly, we did not find an association with earlier access to mental health services at symptom onset (DUP as proxy). Therefore, our results suggest FHS does not modify attitudes towards prevention. DISCLOSURE: No significant relationships. Cambridge University Press 2022-09-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9567399/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2022.579 Text en © The Author(s) 2022 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstract
Sagué-Vilavella, M.
Fico, G.
Anmella, G.
Giménez-Palomo, A.
Gómez-Ramiro, M.
Pons Cabrera, M.
Madero, S.
Vieta, E.
Murru, A.
Bipolar disorders and suicide: stumbling twice with the same stone?
title Bipolar disorders and suicide: stumbling twice with the same stone?
title_full Bipolar disorders and suicide: stumbling twice with the same stone?
title_fullStr Bipolar disorders and suicide: stumbling twice with the same stone?
title_full_unstemmed Bipolar disorders and suicide: stumbling twice with the same stone?
title_short Bipolar disorders and suicide: stumbling twice with the same stone?
title_sort bipolar disorders and suicide: stumbling twice with the same stone?
topic Abstract
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9567399/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2022.579
work_keys_str_mv AT saguevilavellam bipolardisordersandsuicidestumblingtwicewiththesamestone
AT ficog bipolardisordersandsuicidestumblingtwicewiththesamestone
AT anmellag bipolardisordersandsuicidestumblingtwicewiththesamestone
AT gimenezpalomoa bipolardisordersandsuicidestumblingtwicewiththesamestone
AT gomezramirom bipolardisordersandsuicidestumblingtwicewiththesamestone
AT ponscabreram bipolardisordersandsuicidestumblingtwicewiththesamestone
AT maderos bipolardisordersandsuicidestumblingtwicewiththesamestone
AT vietae bipolardisordersandsuicidestumblingtwicewiththesamestone
AT murrua bipolardisordersandsuicidestumblingtwicewiththesamestone