When selecting pharmacotherapy for patients with bipolar disorder, clinical and prognostic correlates will ultimately influence what treatments make the most sense for a patient – but the process is a balancing act, according to Joseph F. Goldberg, MD.
“Everything we do in medicine in general, and psychiatry, and bipolar disorder in particular is a risk-benefit analysis,” Dr. Goldberg said at the virtual Psychopharmacology Update presented by Current Psychiatry and Global Academy for Medical Education. “Everything has its side effects. We’re always balancing risks and benefits.”
Patients with bipolar disorder often present with three common subtypes of the illness: Those who have associated psychosis, comorbid anxiety disorders, and comorbid ADHD. “These are three common presentations of the many, many kinds of presentations,” said Dr. Goldberg, clinical professor of psychiatry at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York.
Bipolar disorder with associated psychosis
In the case of bipolar I disorder, more than 50% of manic episodes have some element of psychosis, with as many as 10% of patients showing signs of delusions 2 years after an episode, Dr. Goldberg explained. In these patients, mania relapse is predicted by mood-incongruent psychosis – a condition usually associated with schizophrenia, he said.
“If [they] have unusual beliefs and ideas, and they’re not consistent with a particular mood state, we sometimes clinically think this sounds more like a primary psychotic process,” he said. “Maybe, but not necessarily. So just because the patient may say, ‘The FBI is after me,’ or, ‘My thoughts are being read over the Internet,’ and they don’t connect that with a grandiose theme, it doesn’t negate a diagnosis of bipolar disorder.”
Psychotic mania is also associated with comorbid anxiety disorder. About half of patients with bipolar I disorder will also experience impairments of attention, executive functioning, and verbal memory separately from ADHD. “The cognitive symptoms of bipolar disorder that are part of what’s inherited doesn’t seem to be the case, that there’s a clear greater degree of neuropsychological impairment in psychotic than nonpsychotic mania,” Dr. Goldberg said.
Lithium has a poor response in the presence of psychosis in patients with bipolar disorder but performs better when the patient receives it alongside an antipsychotic. “Lithium does have value in psychotic mania,” Dr. Goldberg said. “Psychosis would be a negative prognostic sign, and certainly an indication for including an antipsychotic.”
In contrast to lithium, divalproex has shown evidence in reducing manic and psychotic symptoms similarly to haloperidol. “Divalproex may reduce mania symptoms, whether or not it’s helping psychosis. You’d think you have to get both reduced at the same time, but actually can see that even if there’s baseline psychosis, that does not diminish the chance of seeing a reduction in core mania symptoms,” Dr. Goldberg said.
Carbamazepine may also be advantageous to use over lithium when patients present with delusions, and a combination of carbamazepine and lithium may be comparable to haloperidol in combination with lithium when treating psychotic mania. “What we do know is, at least in some studies, there may be some greater value in treating psychotic mania with carbamazepine as compared to lithium, particularly when there are delusions present, more so than hallucinations or formal thought disorder,” Dr. Goldberg said.
In patients with bipolar disorder and associated psychotic mania, clinicians should avoid dopamine agonists such as amphetamine and pramipexole, as well as ketamine. While some evidence has shown that second-generation antipsychotics work to treat bipolar depression, “there’s not really an evidence base to suggest that first-generation antipsychotics are protective against depression,” Dr. Goldberg said.