New Delhi: Continued treatment with modern antidepressants could help prevent patients with bipolar disorder from relapsing into a depressive episode, results from an international clinical trial led by researchers at the University of British Columbia, Canada, reveal. Bipolar disorder is characterised by extreme changes in one's emotional state that cycles through periods of intense highs (mania or hypomania) and lows (depression). Patients are prescribed antidepressants alongside mood stabilisers and/or antipsychotic medications as treatment.
However, the duration for prescribing antidepressants after depression subsides, which is part of the maintenance treatment to prevent the patient from relapsing into a depressive phase, is hotly debated. This is due to a lack of evidence and concerns that antidepressants may induce mania, mixed states or rapid cycling between mania and depression.
While Canadian guidelines currently recommend a duration of eight weeks after remission of depression, the Indian Psychiatric Society makes no explicit duration recommendation. The trial results suggesting extending the treatment period beyond current guidelines challenge current clinical practice guidelines and could change how bipolar depression is managed globally. They are published in the New England Journal of Medicine and the trials were conducted at Canadian, South Korean and Indian sites.
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"Some studies have shown that up to 80 per cent of patients continue receiving antidepressants for six months or longer," said Lakshmi Yatham, professor and head of the department of psychiatry at the university, and the study's lead author. The study included 178 patients with bipolar I disorder in remission from a depressive episode following treatment with modern antidepressant drugs. They were randomly assigned to either continue antidepressant treatment for 52 weeks, or begin tapering off antidepressants at six weeks and switch to a placebo at eight weeks.