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Identifying Profiles of Patients With Bipolar I Disorder Who Would Benefit From Maintenance Therapy With a Long-Acting Injectable Antipsychotic

Mauricio Tohen, Joseph F. Goldberg, Youssef Hassoun, Suresh Sureddi

2020The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

People with bipolar I disorder experience an illness course marked by potentially disastrous manic episodes, disabling depressive episodes, and functional impairment. A frequent obstacle to wellness in these individuals is nonadherence to treatment. Long-acting injectable (LAI) antipsychotics have the potential to address nonadherence and thereby increase patients' chances at sustained recovery and normal psychosocial functioning. LAI formulations of 2 second-generation antipsychotics-aripiprazole monohydrate and risperidone-have received approval from the US Food and Drug Administration as monotherapy or adjunctive therapy to lithium or valproate for the maintenance treatment of bipolar I disorder in adult patients. In a recent roundtable meeting, a panel of 4 experts discussed the use of these medications in bipolar I disorder. This Academic Highlights summarizes their discussion, which included the impact of functional impairment, the potential benefits of employing an LAI antipsychotic at earlier stages of bipolar illness, and the characteristics of patients who may be good candidates for treatment with an LAI antipsychotic.

Topics & Concepts

Bipolar disorderAntipsychoticRapid cyclingPsychiatryMaintenance therapyMedicineTreatment of bipolar disorderPsychologyPsychotherapistSchizophrenia (object-oriented programming)Internal medicineLithium (medication)ManiaChemotherapyBipolar Disorder and Treatment
Identifying Profiles of Patients With Bipolar I Disorder Who Would Benefit From Maintenance Therapy With a Long-Acting Injectable Antipsychotic | Litcius