Abstract

Background: Preceding suicide attempts strongly predict future suicidal acts. However, whether attempting suicide per se increases the risk remains undetermined. We longitudinally investigated among patients with mood disorders whether after a suicide attempt future attempts occur during milder depressive states, indicating a possible lowered threshold for acting.Methods: We used 5-year follow-up data from 581 patients of the Jorvi Bipolar Study, Vantaa Depression Study, and Vantaa Primary Care Depression Study cohorts. Lifetime suicide attempts were investigated at baseline and during the follow-up. At follow-up interviews, life-chart data on the course of the mood disorder were generated and suicide attempts timed. By using individual-level data and multilevel modeling, we investigated at each incident attempt the association between the lifetime ordinal number of the attempt and the major depressive episode (MDE) status (full MDE, partial remission, or remission).Results: A total of 197 suicide attempts occurred among 90 patients, most during MDEs. When the dependencies between observations and individual liabilities were modeled, no association was found between the number of past suicide attempts at the time of each attempt and partial remissions. No association between adjusted inter-suicide attempt times and the number of past attempts emerged during follow-up. No indication for direct risk-increasing effects was found.Conclusion: Among mood disorder patients, repeated suicide attempts do not tend to occur during milder depressive states than in the preceding attempts. Previous suicide attempts may indicate underlying diathesis, future risk being principally set by the course of the disorder itself.

Highlights

  • Patients with depressive or bipolar disorder have a high risk for suicidal ideation, suicide attempts [1,2,3], and death by suicide [4, 5]

  • Crosssectional epidemiological surveys and meta-analytic categorical data have suggested that depression mainly influences suicidal ideation or challenges its clinical significance [14, 15], suicide attempts over time do accumulate among patients with the most severe, altering, and persistent symptoms [12, 13, 16]

  • Based on a large well-characterized prospective mood disorder cohort and life-chart methodology, we aim to examine within an individual whether sequential suicide attempts are associated with a lower level of depression severity

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Summary

Introduction

Patients with depressive or bipolar disorder have a high risk for suicidal ideation, suicide attempts [1,2,3], and death by suicide [4, 5]. Crosssectional epidemiological surveys and meta-analytic categorical data have suggested that depression mainly influences suicidal ideation or challenges its clinical significance [14, 15], suicide attempts over time do accumulate among patients with the most severe, altering, and persistent symptoms [12, 13, 16]. We longitudinally investigated among patients with mood disorders whether after a suicide attempt future attempts occur during milder depressive states, indicating a possible lowered threshold for acting

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