Bipolarity in Older individuals Living without Drugs (BOLD): Protocol and preliminary findings

Alexandra J M Beunders, Eline Regeer, Marieke van Eijkelen, Henk Mathijssen, Chris Nijboer, Sigfried N T M Schouws, Patricia van Oppen, Almar A L Kok, Ralph W Kupka, Annemiek Dols

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Although clinical guidelines regard prophylactic medication as the cornerstone of treatment, it is estimated almost half of patients with bipolar disorder (BD) live without medication. This group is underrepresented in research but can provide indispensable knowledge on natural course, resilience and self-management strategies. We aim to describe the clinical phenotype of patients diagnosed with BD who have discontinued maintenance treatment.

METHODS: The mixed-methods BOLD study included 58 individuals aged 50 years and over with BD that did not use maintenance medication in the past 5 years. A preliminary, quantitative comparison of clinical characteristics between BOLD and our pre-existing cohort of >220 older BD outpatients with medication (Dutch Older Bipolars, DOBi) was performed.

RESULTS: BD-I, psychiatric comorbidities, number of mood episodes and lifetime psychotic features were more prevalent in BOLD compared to DOBi. BOLD participants had a younger age at onset and reported more childhood trauma. BOLD participants reported fewer current mood symptoms and higher cognitive, social, and global functioning.

LIMITATIONS: Our findings may not be generalizable to all individuals diagnosed with BD living without maintenance medication due to selection-bias.

CONCLUSION: A group of individuals exists that meets diagnostic criteria of BD and is living without maintenance medication. They appear to be relatively successful in terms of psychosocial functioning, although they do not have a milder clinical course than those on maintenance medication. The high prevalence of childhood trauma warrants further investigation. Future analyses will examine differences between BOLD and DOBi per domain (e.g. cognition, physical health, psychosocial functioning, coping).

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)160-166
Number of pages7
JournalJournal of affective disorders
Volume348
Early online date26 Dec 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Mar 2024

Keywords

  • Bipolar
  • Functioning
  • Medication
  • Naturalistic course

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