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Journal Article

Citation

Tondo L, Pompili M, Forte A, Baldessarini RJ. Acta Psychiatr. Scand. 2015; 133(3): 174-186.

Affiliation

Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/acps.12517

PMID

26555604

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Assess reported risk of suicide attempts by patients with bipolar disorder (BD).

METHOD: Systematic searching yielded 101 reports from 22 countries (79 937 subjects). We analyzed for risk (%) and incidence rates (%/year) of attempts, comparing sex and diagnostic types, including by meta-analysis.

RESULTS: Attempt risk averaged 31.1% [CI: 27.9-34.3] of subjects, or 4.24 [3.78-4.70]%/year. In BD-I (43 studies) and BD-II subjects (30 studies), risks (29.9%, 31.4%) and incidence rates (4.01, 4.11%/year) were similar and not different by meta-analysis. Among women vs. men, risks (33.7% vs. 25.5%) and incidence (4.50 vs. 3.21%/year) were greater (also supported by meta-analysis: RR = 1.35 [CI: 1.25-1.45], P < 0.0001). Neither measure was related to reporting year, % women/study, or to onset or current age. Risks were greater with longer exposure, whereas incidence rates decreased with longer time at risk, possibly through 'dilution' by longer exposure.

CONCLUSION: This systematic update of international experience underscores high risks of suicide attempts among patients with BD (BD-I = BD-II; women > men). Future studies should routinely include exposure times and incidence rates by diagnostic type and sex for those who attempt suicide or not.


Language: en

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