4.5 Article

Excess mortality and life-years lost in people with bipolar disorder: an 11-year population-based cohort study

Journal

EPIDEMIOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRIC SCIENCES
Volume 30, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S2045796021000305

Keywords

Bipolar disorder; premature mortality; excess life-years lost; mortality trend

Categories

Funding

  1. Hong Kong Research Grants Council [17124715]
  2. State Key Laboratory of Brain & Cognitive Sciences, the University of Hong Kong

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The study showed that patients with bipolar disorder in Hong Kong have significantly higher mortality rates than the general population, with respiratory diseases, cardiovascular diseases, and cancers being the main causes of death. Men and women with bipolar disorder had 6.78 and 7.35 years of excess LYLs, respectively. Although there was a slight improvement in the mortality gap for men with bipolar disorder, the overall gap remained stable over time.
Aims Bipolar disorder is associated with premature mortality, but evidence is mostly derived from Western countries. There has been no research evaluating shortened lifespan in bipolar disorder using life-years lost (LYLs), which is a recently developed mortality metric taking into account illness onset for life expectancy estimation. The current study aimed to examine the extent of premature mortality in bipolar disorder patients relative to the general population in Hong Kong (HK) in terms of standardised mortality ratio (SMR) and excess LYLs, and changes of mortality rate over time. Methods This population-based cohort study investigated excess mortality in 12 556 bipolar disorder patients between 2008 and 2018, by estimating all-cause and cause-specific SMRs, and LYLs. Trends in annual SMRs over the 11-year study period were assessed. Study data were retrieved from a territory-wide medical-record database of HK public healthcare services. Results Patients had higher all-cause [SMR: 2.60 (95% CI: 2.45-2.76)], natural-cause [SMR: 1.90 (95% CI: 1.76-2.05)] and unnatural-cause [SMR: 8.63 (95% CI: 7.34-10.03)] mortality rates than the general population. Respiratory diseases, cardiovascular diseases and cancers accounted for the majority of deaths. Men and women with bipolar disorder had 6.78 (95% CI: 6.00-7.84) years and 7.35 (95% CI: 6.75-8.06) years of excess LYLs, respectively. The overall mortality gap remained similar over time, albeit slightly improved in men with bipolar disorder. Conclusions Bipolar disorder is associated with increased premature mortality and substantially reduced lifespan in a predominantly Chinese population, with excess deaths mainly attributed to natural causes. Persistent mortality gap underscores an urgent need for targeted interventions to improve physical health of patients with bipolar disorder.

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