TY - JOUR PY - 2012// TI - Age at onset versus family history and clinical outcomes in 1,665 international bipolar-I disorder patients JO - World psychiatry A1 - Baldessarini, Ross J. A1 - Tondo, Leonardo A1 - Vazquez, Gustavo H. A1 - Undurraga, Juan A1 - Bolzani, Lorenza A1 - Yildiz, Aysegul A1 - Khalsa, Hari-Mandir K. A1 - Lai, Massimo A1 - Lepri, Beatrice A1 - Lolich, Maria A1 - Maffei, Pier Mario A1 - Salvatore, Paola A1 - Faedda, Gianni L. A1 - Vieta, Eduard A1 - Mauricio, Tohen SP - 40 EP - 46 VL - 11 IS - 1 N2 - Early onset in bipolar disorder (BPD) has been associated with greater familial risk and unfavorable clinical outcomes. We pooled data from seven international centers to analyze the relationships of family history and symptomatic as well as functional measures of adult morbidity to onset age, or onset in childhood (age <12), adolescence (12-18), or adulthood (19-55 years). In 1,665 adult, DSM-IV BPD-I patients, onset was 5% in childhood, 28% in adolescence, and 53% at peak ages 15-25. Adolescent and adult onset did not differ by symptomatic morbidity (episodes/year, percentage of months ill, co-morbidity, hospitalization, suicide attempts) or family history. Indications of favorable adult functional outcomes (employment, living independently, marriage and children, and a composite measure including education) ranked, by onset: adult > adolescent > child. Onset in childhood versus adolescence had more episodes/year and more psychiatric co-morbidity. Family history was most prevalent with childhood onset, similar over onset ages 12-40 years, and fell sharply thereafter. Multivariate modeling sustained the impression that family history and poor functional, but not symptomatic, outcomes were associated with younger, especially childhood onset. Early onset was more related to poor functional outcomes than greater symptomatic morbidity, with least favorable outcomes and greater family history with childhood onset.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 1723-8617 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wpsyc.2012.01.006 ID - ref1 ER -