Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy for bipolar disorder: a feasibility trial.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to investigate the feasibility and perceived benefit of Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) in bipolar patients of various subtypes.
Results Summary
Most participants reported moderate to significant durable benefits from MBCT, though mindfulness practice decreased over time. Change in mindfulness skills was associated with reduced depressive symptoms, but no significant increase in mindfulness skills was detected overall.
Population
Bipolar outpatients (type I, II, and NOS).
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) | no change | feasibility and perception | bipolar patients | - | feasible and well perceived | #1 |
Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) | increase | perceived benefit | most participants | moderately to very much | durably, moderately to very much benefited | #2 |
mindfulness practice | decrease | frequency of mindfulness practice | patients | - | decreased | #3 |
Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) | no change | mindfulness skills | patients | no significant increase | no significant increase | #4 |
change of mindfulness skills | neutral | change of depressive symptoms | patients | - | significantly associated | #5 |
BACKGROUND: The present open study investigates the feasibility of Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) in groups solely composed of bipolar patients of various subtypes. MBCT has been mostly evaluated with remitted unipolar depressed patients and little is known about this treatment in bipolar disorder. METHODS: Bipolar outpatients (type I, II and NOS) were included and evaluated for depressive and hypomanic symptoms, as well as mindfulness skills before and after MBCT. Patients' expectations before the program, perceived benefit after completion and frequency of mindfulness practice were also recorded. RESULTS: Of 23 included patients, 15 attended at least four MBCT sessions. Most participants reported having durably, moderately to very much benefited from the program, although mindfulness practice decreased over time. Whereas no significant increase of mindfulness skills was detected during the trial, change of mindfulness skills was significantly associated with change of depressive symptoms between pre- and post-MBCT assessments. CONCLUSIONS: MBCT is feasible and well perceived among bipolar patients. Larger and randomized controlled studies are required to further evaluate its efficacy, in particular regarding depressive and (hypo)manic relapse prevention. The mediating role of mindfulness on clinical outcome needs further examination and efforts should be provided to enhance the persistence of meditation practice with time.