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Use of the Functioning Assessment Short Test (FAST) in Defining Functional Recovery in Bipolar I Disorder. Post-hoc Analyses of Long-term Studies of Aripiprazole Once Monthly As Maintenance Treatment

Overview
Publisher Dove Medical Press
Specialty Psychiatry
Date 2019 Oct 17
PMID 31616148
Citations 1
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Abstract

Purpose: There is growing agreement that definitions of "recovery" in bipolar-I disorder (BP-I) should include functional outcomes beyond sustained symptomatic remission. In this post-hoc analysis, we assessed functional recovery rates according to the validated Functioning Assessment Short Test (FAST) in participants with BP-I after 52 weeks of maintenance treatment with aripiprazole once monthly (AOM).

Patients And Methods: Rates of functional recovery with AOM 400 were investigated in two 52-week studies. NCT01567527 was a placebo-controlled, double-blind, randomized-withdrawal study and NCT01710709 was an open-label study. Functional recovery, assessed at the end of the respective maintenance phases, was defined as a total FAST score of ≤11 for 8 consecutive weeks.

Results: Post-hoc analyses included 229 patients from the randomized-withdrawal study (AOM 400 n=116; placebo n=113). The open-label study included 402 patients (including 321 de novo patients and 81 rollover patients who had completed the randomized-withdrawal study). In the randomized-withdrawal study, functional recovery was achieved by 30.2% (n=35) of the AOM 400 group compared with 24.8% (n=28) in the placebo group. The difference was not statistically significant (=0.39). In the open-label study, 36% (n=116) of de novo patients and 43% (n=35) of rollover patients had functionally recovered after 52 weeks of AOM 400 treatment.

Conclusion: These data highlight the utility of a sustained FAST total score of ≤11 as a definition of recovery and emphasize the possibility of achieving this ambitious treatment goal with effective long-term treatment.

Citing Articles

Process and Outcome Evaluations of Smartphone Apps for Bipolar Disorder: Scoping Review.

Tatham I, Clarke E, Grieve K, Kaushal P, Smeddinck J, Barron Millar E J Med Internet Res. 2022; 24(3):e29114.

PMID: 35319470 PMC: 8987951. DOI: 10.2196/29114.

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