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Identifying prior signals of bipolar disorder using primary care electronic health records: a nested case-control study.

Morgan, Catharine; Ashcroft, Darren M; Chew-Graham, Carolyn A; Sperrin, Matthew; Webb, Roger T; Francis, Anya; Scott, Jan; Yung, Alison R

Authors

Catharine Morgan

Darren M Ashcroft

Matthew Sperrin

Roger T Webb

Anya Francis

Jan Scott

Alison R Yung



Abstract

Bipolar disorders are serious mental illnesses, yet evidence suggests that the diagnosis and treatment of bipolar disorder can be delayed by around 6 years. To identify signals of undiagnosed bipolar disorder using routinely collected electronic health records. A nested case-control study conducted using the UK Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD) GOLD dataset, an anonymised electronic primary care patient database linked with hospital records. 'Cases' were adult patients with incident bipolar disorder diagnoses between 1 January 2010 and 31 July 2017. The patients with bipolar disorder (the bipolar disorder group) were matched by age, sex, and registered general practice to 20 'controls' without recorded bipolar disorder (the control group). Annual episode incidence rates were estimated and odds ratios from conditional logistic regression models were reported for recorded health events before the index (diagnosis) date. There were 2366 patients with incident bipolar disorder diagnoses and 47 138 matched control patients (median age 40 years and 60.4% female: = 1430/2366 with bipolar disorder and = 28 471/47 138 without). Compared with the control group, the bipolar disorder group had a higher incidence of diagnosed depressive, psychotic, anxiety, and personality disorders and escalating self-harm up to 10 years before a bipolar disorder diagnosis. Sleep disturbance, substance misuse, and mood swings were more frequent among the bipolar disorder group than the control group. The bipolar disorder group had more frequent face-to-face consultations, and were more likely to miss multiple scheduled appointments and to be prescribed ≥3 different psychotropic medication classes in a given year. Psychiatric diagnoses, psychotropic prescriptions, and health service use patterns might be signals of unreported bipolar disorder. Recognising these signals could prompt further investigation for undiagnosed significant psychopathology, leading to timely referral, assessment, and initiation of appropriate treatments. [Abstract copyright: © The Authors.]

Citation

Morgan, C., Ashcroft, D. M., Chew-Graham, C. A., Sperrin, M., Webb, R. T., Francis, A., …Yung, A. R. (in press). Identifying prior signals of bipolar disorder using primary care electronic health records: a nested case-control study. British Journal of General Practice (BJGP), 74, e165-e173. https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2022.0286

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Apr 24, 2023
Online Publication Date Feb 7, 2024
Deposit Date Feb 26, 2024
Journal The British journal of general practice : the journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners
Print ISSN 0960-1643
Electronic ISSN 1478-5242
Publisher Royal College of General Practitioners
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 74
Pages e165-e173
DOI https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2022.0286
Keywords prodromal symptoms, signs and symptoms, electronic health records, primary health care, case–control studies, bipolar disorder
PMID 38325893