Racial differences in the major clinical symptom domains of bipolar disorder.

IF 2.8 2区 医学 Q2 PSYCHIATRY
Kevin Li, Erica Richards, Fernando S Goes
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Background: Across clinical settings, black individuals are disproportionately less likely to be diagnosed with bipolar disorder compared to schizophrenia, a traditionally more severe and chronic disorder with lower expectations for remission. The causes of this disparity are likely multifactorial, ranging from the effects of implicit bias, to developmental and lifelong effects of structural racism, to differing cultural manifestations of psychiatric symptoms and distress. While prior studies examining differences have found a greater preponderance of specific psychotic symptoms (such as persecutory delusions and hallucinations) and a more dysphoric/mixed mania presentation in Black individuals, these studies have been limited by a lack of systematic phenotypic assessment and small sample sizes. In the current report, we have combined data from two large multi-ethnic studies of bipolar disorder with comparable semi-structured interviews to investigate differences in symptoms presentation across the major clinical symptom domains of bipolar disorder.

Results: In the combined meta-analysis, there were 4423 patients diagnosed with bipolar disorder type I, including 775 of self-reported as Black race. When symptom presentations were compared in Black versus White individuals, differences were found across all the major clinical symptom domains of bipolar disorder. Psychotic symptoms, particularly persecutory hallucinations and both persecutory and mood-incongruent delusions, were more prevalent in Black individuals with bipolar disorder type I (ORs = 1.26 to 2.45). In contrast, Black individuals endorsed fewer prototypical manic symptoms, with a notably decreased likelihood of endorsing abnormally elevated mood (OR = 0.44). Within depression associated symptoms, we found similar rates of mood or cognitive related mood symptoms but higher rates of decreased appetite (OR = 1.32) and weight loss (OR = 1.40), as well as increased endorsement of initial, middle, and early-morning insomnia (ORs = 1.73 to 1.82). Concurrently, we found that black individuals with BP-1 were much less likely to be treated with mood stabilizers, such as lithium (OR = 0.45), carbamazepine (OR = 0.37) and lamotrigine (OR = 0.34), and moderately more likely to be on antipsychotic medications (OR = 1.25).

Conclusions: In two large studies spanning over a decade, we found highly consistent and enduring differences in symptoms across the major clinical symptom domains of bipolar disorder. These differences were marked by a greater burden of mood-incongruent psychotic symptoms, insomnia and irritability, and fewer prototypical symptoms of mania. While such symptoms warrant better recognition to reduce diagnostic disparities, they may also represent potential targets of treatment that can be addressed to mitigate persistent disparities in outcome.

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双相情感障碍主要临床症状域的种族差异。
背景:在整个临床环境中,与精神分裂症相比,黑人被诊断为双相情感障碍的可能性不成比例地低,精神分裂症是一种传统上更严重的慢性疾病,缓解的期望更低。造成这种差异的原因可能是多方面的,从内隐偏见的影响到结构性种族主义的发展和终身影响,再到精神症状和痛苦的不同文化表现。虽然先前的研究发现了黑人个体在特定精神病症状(如受迫害妄想和幻觉)和更多的烦躁/混合躁狂表现方面的差异,但由于缺乏系统的表型评估和样本量小,这些研究受到了限制。在当前的报告中,我们结合了来自两项大型多民族双相情感障碍研究的数据,并进行了可比较的半结构化访谈,以调查双相情感障碍主要临床症状域的症状表现差异。结果:在联合荟萃分析中,有4423例患者被诊断为I型双相情感障碍,其中775例自我报告为黑人。当比较黑人和白人个体的症状表现时,发现双相情感障碍的所有主要临床症状域都存在差异。精神病症状,特别是迫害性幻觉以及迫害性和情绪不一致妄想,在黑人双相情感障碍I型患者中更为普遍(or = 1.26至2.45)。相比之下,黑人个体较少认可典型躁狂症状,认可异常情绪升高的可能性显著降低(OR = 0.44)。在抑郁相关症状中,我们发现情绪或认知相关情绪症状的发生率相似,但食欲下降(or = 1.32)和体重减轻(or = 1.40)的发生率较高,并且对初期、中期和清晨失眠的认可增加(or = 1.73至1.82)。同时,我们发现BP-1的黑人个体很少接受心境稳定剂的治疗,如锂(OR = 0.45)、卡马西平(OR = 0.37)和拉莫三嗪(OR = 0.34),而服用抗精神病药物的可能性更大(OR = 1.25)。结论:在跨越十年的两项大型研究中,我们发现双相情感障碍在主要临床症状领域的症状高度一致和持久的差异。这些差异的显著特征是情绪不一致的精神病症状、失眠和易怒的负担更大,而躁狂的典型症状更少。虽然这些症状值得更好地识别以减少诊断差异,但它们也可能是可以解决的潜在治疗目标,以减轻结果的持续差异。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Bipolar Disorders
International Journal of Bipolar Disorders Medicine-Psychiatry and Mental Health
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
5.00%
发文量
26
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Bipolar Disorders is a peer-reviewed, open access online journal published under the SpringerOpen brand. It publishes contributions from the broad range of clinical, psychological and biological research in bipolar disorders. It is the official journal of the ECNP-ENBREC (European Network of Bipolar Research Expert Centres ) Bipolar Disorders Network, the International Group for the study of Lithium Treated Patients (IGSLi) and the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Bipolare Störungen (DGBS) and invites clinicians and researchers from around the globe to submit original research papers, short research communications, reviews, guidelines, case reports and letters to the editor that help to enhance understanding of bipolar disorders.
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