4.7 Article

Mortality of patients with mood disorders: follow-up over 34-38 years

Journal

JOURNAL OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS
Volume 68, Issue 2-3, Pages 167-181

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/S0165-0327(01)00377-9

Keywords

mortality; unipolar; bipolar disorder; suicide; gender; treatment

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Background: All follow-up studies of causes of death in affective disordered patients have found they have markedly elevated suicide rates and a less reproducible increased mortality from other causes. The reported rates by gender, disorder type and treatment are more variable. Methods: Hospitalised affective disordered patients (n= 406) were followed prospectively for 22 years or more. Later, mortality was assessed for 99% of them at which time 76% had died. Results: Standardised Mortality Rates (observed deaths/expected deaths) for patients were elevated especially for suicide and circulatory disorders in both men and women. Women actually had higher suicide rates but that did not take into account the twofold increase in general population rates for men. Unipolar patients had significantly higher rates of suicide than bipolar Is or IIs. In all groups long term medication treatment with antidepressants alone or with a neuroleptic, or with lithium in combination with antidepressants and/or nouroleptics significantly lowered suicide rates even though the treated were more severely ill. Although at the age of onset the suicide rates were most elevated, from ages 30 to 70 the rates were remark-ably constant despite the different courses of illness. Limitations: The patients were identified as inpatients and followed prospectively. The treatments were uncontrolled and are not quantifiable but were documented during the follow-up. Conclusions: Men and women hospitalised for affective disorders have elevated mortality rates from suicide and circulatory disorders. Unipolars have higher suicide rates than bipolar Is or IIs. Long term medication treatment lowers the suicide rates, despite the fact that it was the more severely ill who were treated. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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