Psychotherapy for Bipolar Disorder in Adults: A Review of the Evidence
Abstract
Methods
Results
Individual Psychoeducation | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Study | Treatment Method | Duration | Sample | State at Entry | Outcome |
Perry et al. (1999) (34) | PE or TAU* | 6–12 sessions | n=69 bipolar disorder I (91%), bipolar disorder II | At least two relapses in prior year | Intervention group had sig. fewer manic relapses (27% versus 57%) and higher functioning over 18 months. |
Zaretsky et al. (2008) (36) | CBT + individual PE or individual PE | 13 sessions | n=79 bipolar disorder I, bipolar disorder II (34.2%) | Euthymic or minimally symptomatic | CBT was associated with 50% fewer days of depressed mood and fewer increases in antidepressant dosage over the study year. |
Rea et al. (2003) (37) | FFT or individual PE | 21 sessions | n=53 bipolar disorder I | Hospitalized for manic episode | 1–2 years after treatment, FFT was associated with lower recurrence rates (28% versus 60%) and hospitalization rates (12% versus 60%) than Individual PE |
Group Psychoeducation | |||||
Study | Treatment Method | Duration | Sample | State at Entry | Outcome |
Colom et al. (2003, 2009) (39, 40) | Group PE or unstructured support group | 21 sessions | n=120 n (at 5-year follow-up) = 99 bipolar disorder I (83%), bipolar disorder II | Euthymic | Over two years patients who received PE showed lower relapse rates (60% versus 38%), lower hospitalization rates, and spent significantly less time acutely ill than comparison patients. At 5-year follow-up, PE group had fewer recurrences of any time and spend less time acutely ill. |
Parikh et al. (2012) (30) | CBT or group PE sessions | 20 sessions (CBT); six sessions (PE) | n=204 bipolar disorder I (72%), bipolar disorder II | Full or partial remission | Both groups improved over 72 weeks but there were no significant differences between CBT and group PE. |
de Barros Pellegrini et al. (2013) (32) | Group PE or pharmacotherapy alone | 16 sessions | n=55 bipolar disorder I/ II | Euthymic | After 16 sessions and at 6- and 12-month follow-up, there were no differences between groups |
Candini et al. (2013) (41) | Group PE or TAU | 21 sessions | n=102 bipolar disorder I (97%), bipolar disorder II | Euthymic | PE was associated with lower risk of hospitalization and longer time to hospitalization over 1 year. |
Torrent et al. (2013) (42) | Functional remediationa, PE, or TAU | 21 sessions | n=239 bipolar disorder I, II | At least 3 months of clinical remission and moderate to severe functional impairment | Functional remediation showed efficacy in improving functional impairment, including occupational functioning and interpersonal relationships, compared with TAU. There were no significant effects of treatment on clinical and neurocognitive variables. There were no significant differences between functional remediation and PE although effect sizes for PE were moderate (d=0.41). |
Individual Cognitive and Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy | |||||
Study | Treatment Method | Duration | Sample | State at Entry | Outcome |
Lam et al. (2003, 2005) (49– 51) | CT or TAU | 12–18 sessions | n=103 bipolar disorder I | Euthymic | At 1 year, CT patients had lower relapse rates (44% versus 7%) compared to TAU. CT was also associated with better medication adherence, social functioning, and fewer hospitalizations compared with TAU. At 30 months, group differences in relapse was only significant for depression. Cumulative relapse rates were 64% and 85% for CT and TAU, respectively. |
Ball et al. (2006) (52) | CT or TAU | 20 sessions | n=52 bipolar disorder I, II | Euthymic or mildly symptomatic | At 6 months patients in CT had lower depression scores than those in TAU. Patients in CT also had greater improvements in depressive symptom severity than patients in TAU, but benefits from CT diminished over time. |
Scott et al. (2006) (28) | CBT versus TAU | 22 sessions | n=253 bipolar disorder I, II | “High risk” patients in five community centers | Over 18 months there were no group differences in recurrence, duration of illness episodes, or mean symptom severity between patients in CBT versus TAU. CBT was effective in delaying recurrences in patients with<12 prior episodes. |
Miklowitz et al. ( 2008) (54, 55) | Randomized to either FFT, IPSRT, CBT, or collaborative care | FFT, IPSRT, CBT: 30 sessions; collaborative care: three sessions | n=293 bipolar disorder I, II | Current depressive episode | Over 1 year, patients in any of the 3 intensive therapies recovered more rapidly and were more likely to be clinically well during any study month than those in collaborative care. Intensive psychotherapy was associated with better total functioning, relationship functioning, and life satisfaction scores over 9 months than collaborative care. No differences between intensive therapies. |
Meyer and Hautzinger (2012) (29) | CBT or supportive therapy | 20 sessions | n=76 bipolar disorder I, II (21.1%) | Current mood episode (depressed, mixed, or mania) | CBT showed a nonsignificant trend for preventing any affective episode. No differences in relapse rates were observed. |
Group Cognitive and Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy | |||||
Study | Treatment Method | Duration | Sample | State at Entry | Outcome |
Williams et al. (2008) (57) | Group mindfulness-based cognitive therapy or WLC | Eight sessions | n=68 unipolar (75%) bipolar (25%) | Euthymic | Assignment to MBCT was associated with greater reductions in depressive symptoms than WLC. Those with BP who received MBCT had fewer anxiety symptoms post treatment. |
Costa et al. (2011, 2012) (58, 59) | CBGT or TAU | 14 sessions | n=41 bipolar disorder I (84%), bipolar disorder II | At least one manic/hypomanic/ depressive episode in the past year | Group CBT was associated with significant reductions in mood symptoms and fewer mood episodes over 6 months |
Gomes et al. (2011) (60) | CBGT or TAU | 18 sessions | n=50 bipolar disorder I (76%), bipolar disorder II | Euthymic | Over one year, no differences in time to any episode relapse or number of episodes, but CBGT group had longer median time to first relapse (66 v. 31 weeks) |
Gonzalez-Isasi et al. (2014) (26) | CBGT or pharmacotherapy alone | 20 sessions | n=40 bipolar disorder I | Refactory bipolar disorder disorder (frequent relapses, rapid cycling, suicide attempts, or persistent symptoms despite pharmacotherapy) | At 6-month, 12-month, and 5-year follow-up, PE/CBT group had fewer depression and anxiety symptoms and/or better social-occupational functioning than controls; over 5-years, control group had more hospitalizations than PE/CBT |
Family Therapy | |||||
Study | Treatment Method | Duration | Sample | State at Entry | Outcome |
Miklowitz et al. (2003) (61) | FFT or family-based crisis management | 21 sessions | n=101 bipolar disorder I | Recent acute manic, mixed, or depressive episode | Over 2 years, patients in FFT had lower relapse rates than those in crisis management. FFT was more effective on depressive than manic symptoms. |
Solomon et al. (2008) (62)Miller et al. (2008) (63) | Individual family therapy or multifamily PE group therapy or TAU | 6–12 sessions | n=92 bipolar disorder I | Current mood episode (depressed, mixed, or manic) | No significant differences between groups over 28 months on number of episodes per year and time well. However, in patients from families with high levels of impairment, the addition of a family intervention (family therapy or psycho-educational group) resulted in a significantly improved course of illness. Multifamily PE was associated with significantly lower rates of hospitalization. |
Interpersonal and Social Rhythm Therapy | |||||
Study | Treatment Method | Duration | Sample | State at Entry | Outcome |
Frank et al. (2005, 2008) (71, 72) | IPSRT or ICM for acute treatment. After acute treatment, patients were re-randomized to IPSRT or ICM | QW during acute treatment. Monthly for 2 years once stabilized | n=175 bipolar disorder I | Current episode of mania, depression, or mixed | Patients randomized to IPSRT during acute treatment had longer periods of stability and greater improvement in vocational functioning over 2 years of maintenance treatment than patients in ICM. No differences in outcomes of patients assigned to IPSRT or ICM during maintenance phase. |
Swartz et al. (2012) (27) | IPSRT or quetiapine | 12 sessions | n=25 bipolar disorder II | Currently episode of depression | Both groups showed significant declines in depressive and mania symptoms. Groups did not differ over 12 weeks. |
Integrated Care Management | |||||
Study | Treatment Method | Duration | Sample | State at Entry | Outcome |
Bauer et al. (2006) (74, 76) | SCM (PE sessions + regular patient monitoring) or TAU | Five sessions every week+every other week for 3 years. | n=206 bipolar disorder I, II (13.4%) | 87% began as inpatients | After 2 years, patients in SCM had better social functioning, quality of life, and treatment satisfaction, and had fewer weeks in any mood episode than those in TAU. |
Simon et al. (2006) (87) | SCM (PE sessions + regular patient monitoring) or TAU | Five sessions every week+every other week for 2 years. | n=441 bipolar disorder I, II (23.8%) | Varied clinical states, most ill within past year | Time in a manic or hypomanic episode was significantly lower in SCM group than TAU group (2.59 v. 1.69 weeks). Effects on mania were seen in patients with moderate-sever symptoms at entry. No impact on number of depressive episodes but SCM group had a greater decline in depressive symptoms |
Crowe et al. (2012) (31) | TAU or TAU + specialist supportive care | 22 sessions | n=78, bipolar disorder I, II | Patients actively receiving treatment from community mental health services | No significant differences in end of treatment scores for mood and self-efficacy were found between groups. Of note, out of the 36 patients randomized to receive SSC, 15 declined treatment, and only 14 completed the intervention. |
Other Group Interventions | |||||
Study | Treatment Method | Duration | Sample | State at Entry | Outcome |
Weiss et al. (2007) (78) | Integrated group therapyb or group drug counseling | 20 sessions | n=62 bipolar disorder I (81%), bipolar disorder II, BPNOS with comorbid SUD | Not specified | Patients in integrated group had half as many days of alcohol use, but higher subsyndromal depression and mania scores, than patients in the comparison group. |
Weiss et al. (2009) (79) | Integrated group therapy or group drug counseling delivered in a community setting | 12 sessions | n=61 bipolar disorder I, bipolar disorder II, BPNOS with comorbid SUD | Not specified | During follow-up patients who received Integrated Group Therapy had a greater reduction in substance use than patients receiving only group drug counseling. No between-group differences were significant for changes in depression or mania. |
Castle et al. (2010) (80) | Group programc or weekly phone calls | 12 Sessions plus three booster sessions | n=84 bipolar disorder I, II, BPNOS | Not in acute episode for mania or depression | The treatment participants were significantly less likely to have a relapse than the control participants over the 12 month follow-up. |
Van Dijk et al. (2013) (81) | DBT-base group PE (BDG) or WLC | 12 Sessions | n=26 bipolar disorder I (42%), bipolar disorder II | Euthymic, depressed or hypomanic | BDG was associated with a trend toward fewer depressive symptoms over time of treatment and fewer hospitalizations/ER visits over 6 months of follow-up |
Psychotherapy | Brief Description of Psychotherapy Elements |
---|---|
Psychoeducation | • Group and individual teaching to enhance understanding of the disorder (symptoms, classification, etiologies, course, and prognosis) |
• Provides information about medication adherence (classes of medications, alternative therapies, withdrawal syndromes, risks of nonadherence) | |
• Develops approaches to detect new episodes (detection of prodromes, warning signs of relapse, relapse prevention planning) | |
• Identifies illness coping strategies (stress management) | |
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy | • Skills-based treatment (group or individual) |
• Helps patients recognize and modify the link between maladaptive thoughts and moods | |
• Uses structured exercises to identify (thought records, mood diaries, activity scheduling) and modify maladaptive thoughts and behaviors | |
• Focuses on automatic negative thoughts, distorted thinking, and maladaptive schema | |
• Exercises used to detect new episodes | |
Functional Remediation | • Structured group intervention |
• Tasks and exercises designed to improve memory, attention, problem solving and reasoning, multitasking, and organization | |
Family-Focused Psychotherapy | • Conducted conjointly with a patient and family member (parent, sibling) |
• Provides psychoeducation for patient and family (symptoms, illness course, and outcomes) | |
• Structured exercises to improve communication (making positive requests for change, constructively discussing negative behaviors) | |
• Family problem-solving skills training. | |
Interpersonal and Social Rhythm Therapy | • Typically administered as individual therapy but has been used in group format |
• Provides psychoeducation (symptoms, illness course, and outcomes) | |
• Uses mood and activity tracking to increase the regularity of daily routines (social rhythms) | |
• Regularizes sleep-wake cycle in order to entrain underlying circadian rhythms | |
• Identifies and resolves an interpersonal problem area (grief, role dispute, role transition, or interpersonal deficits) associated with mood instability | |
• Explores grief for the lost healthy self (the person the patient would have become without the disorder) | |
Integrated Care Management | • Targets both the patient and the provider |
• Utilizes strategies of case management in conjunction with group or individual psychotherapy | |
• Psychotherapy provides psychoeducation and illness management skills | |
• Infrastructure enhances communication between patient and health care providers | |
• Supports provider decision-making ability |
Individual Psychoeducation
Group Psychoeducation
Individual Cognitive or Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy
Group Cognitive and Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy
Family Therapy
Interpersonal and Social Rhythm Therapy
Integrated Care Management
Other Group Interventions
Discussion
Strategies | Psychotherapies Utilizing Strategy | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
CBT | FT | IPSRT | PE | ICM | |
Psychoeducation | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Self-rated mood monitoring | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
Relapse prevention | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Tracking and regularizing of sleep-wake cycles | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
Encouraging medication adherence | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Improving communication | ✓ | ✓ |
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