Abstract

It is unknown if young medication-naïve bipolar II (BPII) depressed patients have increased white matter (WM) disruptions. 27 each of young (average 23 years) and treatment-naïve BPII depressed, unipolar depressed (UD) patients and age–sex–education matched healthy controls (HC) underwent 3 T MRIs with diffusion tensor imaging. Diagnostic ratings included Structured Clinical Interview for DSM Disorders (SCID), Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS), Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS) and Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale (HAM-A). Patients were clinically depressed (MADRS-BPII: 26.15 [SD9.25], UD: 25.56 [5.24], p = 0.86). Compared to UD, BPII had increased family bipolarity (BPII 13.6% vs UD 2.5%, p = 0.01, φc = 0.28), hypomanic symptoms (YMRS-BPII: 4.22 [4.24], UD: 1.33 [2], p = 0.02, d = 0.87), lifetime number of depressive episodes (BPII: 2.37 [1.23], UD: 1.44 [0.75], p = 0.02, d = 0.91), lifetime and current-year number of episodes (lifetime BPII: 50.85 [95.47], UD: 1.7 [1.03]; current-year BPII: 9.93 [16.29], UD: 1.11 [0.32], ps = 0.04, ds = 0.73–0.77) and longer illness duration (BPII: 4.96 years [3.96], UD: 2.99 [3.33], p = 0.15, d = 0.54). BPII showed no increased WM disruptions vs UD or HC in any of the 15 a priori WM tracts. UD had lower right superior longitudinal fasciculus (SLF) (temporal) axial diffusivity (AD) (1.14 vs 1.17 (BPII), 1.16 (HC); F = 6.93, 95% CI of{F}_{B}: 0.00073, 5.22, ηp2 = 0.15). Principal component analysis followed by exploratory linear discriminant analysis showed that increased R-SLF (temporal) AD, YMRS and family bipolarity distinguished BPII from UD (81.5% sensitivity, 85.2% specificity) independent of episode number and frequency. Young, medication-naïve adults with BPII depression did not show the WM disruptions distinguishing more chronically ill BP patients from UD. These WM disruptions may therefore be partly attributable to illness chronicity. Longitudinal studies should examine the trajectory of WM changes in BPII and UD and predictive validity of these baseline clinical and imaging parameters.

Highlights

  • Bipolar II disorder (BPII) is the commonest subtype of bipolar ­disorders[1]

  • There has been a paucity of direct comparisons between unipolar depression (UD) and BPII, and the findings above were mostly based on bipolar I (BPI) samples

  • Twenty-seven each of BPII, UD and healthy controls (HC) subjects were included in the analyses

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Summary

Introduction

Depression dominates the course of BPII and is the commonest mode of clinical presentation of the disorder This phenomenological overlap with unipolar depression (UD) belies important clinical differences—poorer response to antidepressants, younger onset, higher recurrence, atypical features, cognitive impairment and increased suicide rates compared with ­UD2–5. Exposure to medications such as ­lithium17, ­antipsychotics17, ­anticonvulsants18, ­antidepressants[19] in Bipolar Disorder (BD) has been known to result in changes in WM integrity that may further add heterogeneity to the results. This may be especially relevant to UD vs BPII comparisons in view of the considerable difference in medications prescribed for these two conditions. The between-group differences are examined with a multi-variate statistical model to differentiate BPII from UD

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