Evidence-based treatment strategies for treatment-resistant bipolar depression: a systematic review.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of inositol as a treatment option for treatment-resistant bipolar depression.
Results Summary
The study included inositol as one of the examined treatments, but the abstract does not provide specific details on its efficacy or outcomes. The overall conclusion suggests that most strategies, including inositol, remain experimental.
Population
Patients with treatment-resistant bipolar depression.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ketamine | neutral | treatment-resistant bipolar depression | - | - | examined the effects | #1 |
(ar)modafinil | neutral | treatment-resistant bipolar depression | - | - | examined the effects | #2 |
pramipexole | neutral | treatment-resistant bipolar depression | - | - | examined the effects | #3 |
lamotrigine | neutral | treatment-resistant bipolar depression | - | - | examined the effects | #4 |
inositol | neutral | treatment-resistant bipolar depression | - | - | examined the effects | #5 |
risperidone | neutral | treatment-resistant bipolar depression | - | - | examined the effects | #6 |
electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) | neutral | treatment-resistant bipolar depression | - | - | examined the effects | #7 |
- | neutral | treatment strategies in resistant bipolar depression | - | - | response rates reported are reassuring | #8 |
OBJECTIVES: Treatment resistance in bipolar depression is a common clinical problem that constitutes a major challenge for the treating clinician as there is a paucity of treatment options. The objective of this paper was to review the evidence for treatment options in treatment-resistant bipolar depression, as found in randomized controlled trials and with special attention to the definition and assessment of treatment resistance. METHODS: A Medline search (from database inception to May 2012) was performed using the search terms treatment resistance or treatment refractory, and bipolar depression or bipolar disorder, supplemented with 43 separate searches using the various pharmacologic agents or technical interventions as search terms. RESULTS: Only seven studies met our inclusion criteria. These studies examined the effects of ketamine (n = 1), (ar)modafinil (n = 2), pramipexole (n = 1), lamotrigine (n = 1), inositol (n = 1), risperidone (n = 1), and electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) (n = 2). CONCLUSIONS: The available level I evidence for treatment strategies in resistant bipolar depression is extremely scarce, and although the response rates reported are reassuring, most of the strategies remain experimental. There is an urgent need for further study in homogeneous patient samples using a clear concept of treatment resistance.