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      Aims and Results of the NIMH Systematic Treatment Enhancement Program for Bipolar Disorder (STEP‐BD)

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          SUMMARY

          The Systematic Treatment Enhancement Program for Bipolar Disorder (STEP‐BD) was funded as part of a National Institute of Mental Health initiative to develop effectiveness information about treatments, illness course, and assessment strategies for severe mental disorders. STEP‐BD studies were planned to be generalizable both to the research knowledge base for bipolar disorder and to clinical care of bipolar patients. Several novel methodologies were developed to aid in illness characterization, and were combined with existing scales on function, quality of life, illness burden, adherence, adverse effects, and temperament to yield a comprehensive data set. The methods integrated naturalistic treatment and randomized clinical trials, which a portion of STEP‐BD participants participated. All investigators and other researchers in this multisite program were trained in a collaborative care model with the objective of retaining a high percentage of enrollees for several years. Articles from STEP‐BD have yielded evidence on risk factors impacting outcomes, suicidality, functional status, recovery, relapse, and caretaker burden. The findings from these studies brought into question the widely practiced use of antidepressants in bipolar depression as well as substantiated the poorly responsive course of bipolar depression despite use of combination strategies. In particular, large studies on the characteristics and course of bipolar depression (the more pervasive pole of the illness), and the outcomes of treatments concluded that adjunctive psychosocial treatments but not adjunctive antidepressants yielded outcomes superior to those achieved with mood stabilizers alone. The majority of patients with bipolar depression concurrently had clinically significant manic symptoms. Anxiety, smoking, and early age of bipolar onset were each associated with increased illness burden. STEP‐BD has established procedures that are relevant to future collaborative research programs aimed at the systematic study of the complex, intrinsically important elements of bipolar disorders.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          CNS Neurosci Ther
          CNS Neurosci Ther
          10.1111/(ISSN)1755-5949
          CNS
          CNS Neuroscience & Therapeutics
          Blackwell Publishing Ltd (Oxford, UK )
          1755-5930
          1755-5949
          07 June 2011
          March 2012
          : 18
          : 3 ( doiID: 10.1111/cns.2012.18.issue-3 )
          : 243-249
          Affiliations
          [ 1 ]Department of Psychiatry, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
          [ 2 ]Department of Psychiatry, Partners Bipolar Treatment Center, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston
          [ 3 ]Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA
          [ 4 ]Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA
          [ 5 ]Department of Psychiatry, Case University School of Medicine, Cleveland, OH, USA
          Author notes
          [*]Charles L. Bowden, 7703 Floyd Curl Drive, MC 7734, San Antonio, TX 78229, USA.
Tel.: 210 567 5405; Fax: 1 210 567 3759;
E‐mail: bowdenc@ 123456uthscsa.edu
          Article
          PMC6493527 PMC6493527 6493527 CNS257
          10.1111/j.1755-5949.2011.00257.x
          6493527
          22070541
          c7a84ac6-f326-4cde-8df2-b140f5dcdce4
          © 2011 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
          History
          : 1 December 2010
          : 4 March 2011
          : 3 May 2011
          Page count
          Figures: 0, Tables: 1, Equations: 0, References: 43, Pages: 7
          Categories
          Reviews (Special Issue for Bipolar Disorder)
          Review
          Custom metadata
          2.0
          March 2012
          Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_NLMPMC version:5.6.8 mode:remove_FC converted:06.09.2019

          Treatment,Neuropsychopharmacology,Mood Disorders,Bipolar

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