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Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy for bipolar disorder: A systematic review.

Journal of affective disorders
November 1, 2018
David A Lovas et al. (2 authors)
Journal ArticleSystematic ReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate the clinical and neurocognitive effects of Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) as an adjunctive treatment for bipolar disorder (BD).

Results Summary

MBCT did not appear to precipitate mania and showed preliminary positive effects on anxiety, residual depression, mood regulation, and attentional/executive control, though studies were underpowered and heterogeneous.

Population

Individuals with bipolar disorder (BD).

Effective Dosage

Not Assessed

Duration

Not Assessed

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (6)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT)
no change
mania
patients with bipolar disorder (BD)
-
did not appear to precipitate
#1
Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT)
decrease
anxiety
patients with bipolar disorder (BD)
-
preliminary evidence to support a positive effect on
#2
Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT)
decrease
residual depression
patients with bipolar disorder (BD)
-
preliminary evidence to support a positive effect on
#3
Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT)
increase
mood regulation
patients with bipolar disorder (BD)
-
preliminary evidence to support a positive effect on
#4
Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT)
increase
broad attentional control
patients with bipolar disorder (BD)
-
preliminary evidence to support a positive effect on
#5
Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT)
increase
frontal-executive control
patients with bipolar disorder (BD)
-
preliminary evidence to support a positive effect on
#6
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Persisting high levels of relapse, morbidity and mortality in bipolar disorder (BD) in spite of first-line, evidence-based psychopharmacology has spurred development and research on adjunctive psychotherapies. Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) is an emerging psychotherapy that has shown benefit in related and comorbid conditions such as major depressive, anxiety, and substance disorders. Furthermore, neurocognitive studies of MBCT suggest that it may have effects on some of the theorized pathophysiological processes in BD. METHODS: We conducted a systematic literature review using PsychINFO and PubMed databases to identify studies reporting clinical and/or neurocognitive findings for MBCT for BD. RESULTS: This search revealed 13 articles. There was a wide range in methodological quality and most studies were underpowered or did not present power calculations. However, MBCT did not appear to precipitate mania, and there is preliminary evidence to support a positive effect on anxiety, residual depression, mood regulation, and broad attentional and frontal-executive control. LIMITATIONS: As meta-analysis is not yet possible due to study heterogeneity and quality, the current review is a narrative synthesis, and therefore net effects cannot be estimated. CONCLUSIONS: MBCT for BD holds promise, but more high-quality studies are needed in order to ascertain its clinical efficacy. Recommendations to address the limitations of the current research are made.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Anxiety DisordersAttentionBipolar DisorderChronic DiseaseCognitive Behavioral TherapyDepressive Disorder, MajorFemaleHumansMaleMindfulnessRecurrenceTreatment Outcome
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety80
Efficacy65/10
Quality60/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations37
Citations/Year5.3
Relative Citation Ratio2.64
NIH Percentile82.1%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score1.88
Normalized Score0.70
Related Supplements
Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy for bipolar disorder: A ... | Panacea Index