Background: The relationship between psychomotor agitation in unipolar depression and mood-switching from depression to manic, hypomanic and mixed states has been controversial. We investigated the future risk of initial mood-switching as a function of psychomotor agitation in unipolar depression.
Methods: We identified 189 participants diagnosed with major depressive disorder (MDD). We divided all patients with MDD into two categories (1) agitated patients (n=74), and (2) non-agitated patients (n=115). These groups were prospectively followed and compared by time to mood-switching. Kaplan-Meier survival curves, log-rank test for trend for survivor functions, and Cox proportional hazard ratio estimates for a multivariate model were conducted to examine the risk of mood-switching by psychomotor agitation.
Results: During follow-up, mood-switching occurred in 20.3% of the agitated patients and 7.0% of the non-agitated patients. In the Kaplan-Meier survival estimates for time to incidence of mood-switching with agitated or non-agitated patients, the cumulative probability of developing mood-switching for agitated patients was higher than those for non-agitated patients (log-rank test: χ(2)=7.148, df=1, p=0.008). Survival analysis was also performed using Cox proportional hazards regression within a multivariate model. The agitation remained significantly associated with incidence of mood-switching (HR=2.98, 95% CI: 1.18-7.51).
Limitations: We did not make a clear distinction between antidepressant-induced mood-switching and spontaneous switching.
Conclusions: The main finding demonstrated that MDD patients with agitation were nearly threefold as likely to experience mood-switching, suggesting that psychomotor agitation in MDD may be related to an indicator of bipolarity.
Keywords: Bipolar disorder; Bipolarity; Major depressive disorder; Mood-switching; Psychomotor agitation.
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