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Journal Article

Citation

Comtois KA, Russo JE, Roy-Byrne P, Ries RK. Biol. Psychiatry 2004; 56(10): 757-763.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2004, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.biopsych.2004.10.003

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Suicide is a major risk for those with bipolar disorder, a risk amplified by comorbid substance abuse in some, but not all, previous studies. To further explore the relationships of substance abuse, suicide, and bipolarity as they present in clinical practice, we analyzed standardized clinical data from a large acute psychiatric inpatient service. Standardized clinical evaluations of 7819 patients with diagnoses of bipolar depression (n = 990), bipolar mania (n = 948), unipolar depressive episode (n = 3626), or schizophrenia-schizoaffective disorders (n = 2255) were analyzed to evaluate the relationship between current substance-use problems, substance-induced symptoms, and a current suicide crisis, as well as lifetime suicide attempts, with logistic regressions adjusting for age, gender, and ethnicity. Across the combined groups, current substance-use problems were significantly associated with a lifetime suicide attempt (odds ratios [ORs] 1.62.5) and to a lesser degree to the admission suicide crisis (ORs 12.2). Among bipolar (depressed/manic) patients, but not other diagnostic groups, those with both current substance-use problems and substance-induced symptoms had even higher rates of a recent suicide crisis (ORs 1.53.1) and of a lifetime attempt (ORs 2.53.4). In bipolar patients, substance use disorder doubled and substance use disorder plus substance-induced symptoms tripled the suicidal risk. Implications for future research are discussed.


Language: en

Keywords

adult; human; age; gender; suicide; female; male; evaluation; bipolar disorder; Bipolar disorder; depression; schizophrenia; substance-related disorders; suicide attempt; self-injurious behavior; hospitalization; prediction; substance abuse; article; controlled study; clinical research; clinical practice; psychologic assessment; priority journal; mental health service; ethnology; lifespan; hospital patient; drug dependence; health hazard; data analysis; symptom; logistic regression analysis; standardization; alcohol-related disorders; bipolar mania

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