Adjunctive antipsychotic treatment of adolescents with bipolar psychosis.

Journal: Journal Of The American Academy Of Child And Adolescent Psychiatry
Published:
Abstract

Background: A combination of an antipsychotic medication and a mood stabilizer is often used for initial treatment of acute psychotic mania. However, the optimal duration of this adjunctive antipsychotic medication is unknown.

Methods: As part of a lithium efficacy study, acutely manic adolescents with psychotic features were given open combination treatment with lithium and an adjunctive antipsychotic medication. If the psychosis resolved, the antipsychotic medication dose was gradually tapered and discontinued after 4 weeks of therapeutic lithium levels. The subject was then given a trial of maintenance lithium monotherapy for up to 4 weeks.

Results: Significant improvement was seen in 64% of the sample with psychotic features after 4 weeks of combination treatment. However, few maintained their response after discontinuation of the antipsychotic medication. Successful discontinuation of antipsychotic medication in this sample was associated with first episode, shorter duration of psychosis, and the presence of thought disorder at baseline.

Conclusions: Adjunctive antipsychotic medication needs to be maintained for longer than 4 weeks in the vast majority of adolescents with psychotic mania, even though the manic and psychotic symptoms have resolved and lithium treatment is maintained. Future studies to determine the optimal duration of adjunctive antipsychotic medication treatment are warranted.

Authors
V Kafantaris, D Coletti, R Dicker, G Padula, J Kane
Relevant Conditions

Bipolar Disorder (BPD)