Mood Stabilization and
Destabilization During Acute and
Continuation Phase Treatment for
Bipolar I Disorder With Lamotrigine
or Placebo
Joseph F. Goldberg, MD; Joseph R. Calabrese,
MD; Benjamin R. Saville, PhD; Mark A. Frye, MD;
Terence A. Ketter, MD; Trisha Suppes, MD, PhD;
Robert M. Post, MD; and Frederick K. Goodwin,
MD
Background: During post–acute phase pharmacotherapy for bipolar
disorder, there has been little empirical study to establish when emerging mania
symptoms (1) are of clinical significance and (2) reflect iatrogenic events
versus the natural course of illness.
Method: Secondary analyses were conducted in a previously studied group
of bipolar I disorder (DSM-IV) outpatients randomly assigned to lamotrigine
monotherapy (n = 171) or placebo (n = 121), and a larger prerandomization
group (N = 966) during open-label titration of lamotrigine, following an index
depressive episode. Time until the emergence of mania symptoms, at varying
severity thresholds, was examined over 6 months for lamotrigine versus
placebo, while controlling for potential confounding factors in Cox
proportional hazard models. Subject enrollment occurred between July 1997
and August 2001.
Results: Rates of mood elevation during both acute open-label and
randomized continuation phases of lamotrigine treatment were comparable to
those seen with placebo during the randomized phase. The hazard ratio for the
emergence of mania symptoms with lamotrigine was not significantly different
from placebo (hazard ratio = 0.79; 95% CI, 0.53 to 1.16), with an upper bound
that suggests no meaningful increase in susceptibility toward mania with
lamotrigine. By contrast, clinically meaningful rises in mania symptom severity
were predicted by baseline residual manic symptoms prerandomization and by
the number of manic, hypomanic, or mixed episodes in the past year.
Conclusions: Based on a composite definition of mood destabilization
involving a range of severity thresholds for emerging signs of mania,
lamotrigine confers no meaningful elevated risk relative to placebo for mood
destabilization in bipolar I disorder. Rather, illness burden related to residual or
lifetime mania features may hold greater importance for explaining mania
relapses or breakthrough manic features during lamotrigine continuation
pharmacotherapy.
J Clin Psychiatry
© Copyright 2009 Physicians Postgraduate Press, Inc
Submitted: May 15, 2008; accepted September 10, 2008.
Online ahead of print: August 11, 2009 (doi:10.4088/JCP.08m04381).
Corresponding author: Joseph F. Goldberg, MD, 128 East Ave, Norwalk, CT
06851 (e-mail: joseph.goldberg@mssm.edu).
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