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Original Research

Adherence to Pharmacotherapy in Bipolar Disorder Patients With and Without Co-Occurring Substance Use Disorders

Sumita G. Manwani, MD; Kathleen A. Szilagyi, BA; Benjamin Zablotsky, BA; John Hennen, PhD; Margaret L. Griffin, PhD; and Roger D. Weiss, MD

Published: August 15, 2007

Article Abstract

Objective: To examine patterns of adherence to mood stabilizers and reasons for nonadherence in patients with bipolar disorder, with and without substance use disorder (SUD).

Method: From December 2003 to October 2004, 115 patients with DSM-IV-diagnosed bipolar disorder (58 with SUD and 57 without SUD) were administered a structured interview regarding their lifetime experience with mood stabilizers.

Results: Lifetime adherence with mood stabilizers for the SUD group was 65.5%, versus 82.5% for the non-SUD group (p < .05). Lifetime lithium adherence for the SUD group was lower than for the non-SUD group (65.9% vs. 85.0%, p < .05). Substance-related reasons were more commonly cited by the SUD group than the non-SUD group. In contrast, pill- and dosage-related reasons were more frequently endorsed by the non-SUD group than the SUD group.

Conclusion: In bipolar disorder patients, those with co-occurring SUD were less adherent than those without SUD. The SUD group was also less adherent to lithium than the non-SUD group. The reasons for nonadherence differed by presence or absence of a SUD. Physicians should be alert to these differences in their clinical practices while prescribing medications.

Volume: 68

Quick Links: Bipolar Disorder

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