Commentary March 25, 2015

Mixed Depression: A Farewell to Differential Diagnosis?

Joseph F. Goldberg, MD

J Clin Psychiatry 2015;76(3):e378-e380

Article Abstract

Because this piece does not have an abstract, we have provided for your benefit the first 3 sentences of the full text.

In this issue of the Journal, Perugi and colleagues delve into the murky and controversial diagnostic boundaries between unipolar and bipolar mood disorders. As the authors intimate, the decision by DSM-5’s crafters to loosen the operational definition of mixed episodes adds to ongoing debate over the beleaguered document’s various symptom tweaks and diagnostic reshufflings. DSM-5 rightly acknowledged that many depressed bipolar patients experience subthreshold mania symptoms while depressed and that simultaneous symptoms of both poles can and often do coexist in bipolar II as well as bipolar I mood states.

See Article by Perugi et al.

This work may not be copied, distributed, displayed, published, reproduced, transmitted, modified, posted, sold, licensed, or used for commercial purposes. By downloading this file, you are agreeing to the publisher’s Terms & Conditions.

Mixed Depression: A Farewell to Differential Diagnosis?

In this issue of the Journal, Perugi and colleagues1 delve into the murky and controversial diagnostic boundaries between unipolar and bipolar mood disorders. As the authors intimate, the decision by DSM-5‘s crafters to loosen the operational definition of mixed episodes adds to ongoing debate over the beleaguered document’s various symptom tweaks and diagnostic reshufflings. DSM-5 rightly acknowledged that many depressed bipolar patients experience subthreshold mania symptoms while depressed and that simultaneous symptoms of both poles can and often do coexist in bipolar II as well as bipolar I mood states. DSM-5 also took notice of empirical findings that high energy states robustly differentiate bipolar from unipolar disorder,2 underscoring the principle that bipolar illness is as much a disorder of energy and psychomotor functioning as mood. But the shortcomings of DSM-5‘s revisions involving “mixedness” are important and risk dwarfing these nosologic advances.

DSM-5‘s decision to apply the “mixed features” specifier to both unipolar and bipolar depressive episodes when subsyndromal mania symptoms also exist harkens to Kraepelin’s view that polarity was not an all-or-none phenomenon and was less important than other characteristics (such as excitation-agitation, or high recurrence) in his original conception of manic-depressive illness. In practice, though, efforts to articulate valid operational criteria for “mixedness” create their own problems—particularly when asking diagnosticians to cherry-pick only some “possible” mania symptoms, side-stepping those that could also reflect depression. Researchers who conduct criteria-based diagnostic interviews may thus agonize all the more over ambiguous cases, while time-pressured everyday clinicians will probably ignore such nuanced distinctions altogether and potentially make “mixed features” (never mind polarity) a wastebasket descriptor for any and all forms of irritable moody people.

Throughout its editions and revisions, the DSM has included as its final criterion for virtually every described entity the proviso that observed symptoms should not be attributed to a particular disorder if they can be better accounted for by another condition. This caveat becomes especially difficult when evaluating diagnostically nonspecific symptoms such as irritability or mood instability (or other such broad mental phenomena as “inattentiveness” or “apathy”). When considering depressive mixed states, Perugi et al1 (and other authors3) confront us with the challenge of how best to classify an important nosologic entity without “double counting” symptoms, or conflating 2 or more disease states that share common elements. The BRIDGE data1 invite us to consider whether depressed patients with such diagnostically nonspecific symptoms as irritability, mood instability, distractibility, agitation, and anxiety belong to the bipolar spectrum, or whether they may be better accounted for by other nonbipolar comorbidities. In doing so, they draw our attention to the DSM-5 conundrum of whether to include or exclude transdiagnostic symptoms when characterizing a distinct clinical entity. (By analogy, should a newly recognized inflammatory disease exclude fever as part of its core symptom constellation in order to avoid conflation with a comorbid infectious process? Or, while dyspnea and chest pain do not help to differentiate angina from pneumonia, can those symptoms really be ignored when considering either diagnosis?)

If phenomenology studies in psychiatry have taught us anything over the past century, it is that no psychiatric symptom is pathognomonic of any one disorder. Bizarre thought content no longer figures so prominently as it once did in considering a diagnosis of schizophrenia. Nor does catatonia, paranoia, or even Schneiderian first-rank symptoms. In the case of mood disorders, while “mixedness” is no doubt a real phenomenon, its “truest” definition remains messy. Prominent irritability, for example, was found in almost half of unipolar depressed patients in the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression (STAR*D) trial, and was more closely related to anxiety and depression severity than to occult “bipolar spectrum” features.4 Similarly, in the NIMH Collaborative Depression Study, irritability and anger were evident in over half of unipolar depressed patients, and were in turn linked to an array of complex illness characteristics, including more anxiety and substance misuse, greater depression severity and chronicity, and personality disorders.5 While some authors feel that irritable depression is practically synonymous with “bipolarity,”6 it may simply be an indicator of overall severity and complex psychopathology.

“Affective instability” also poses a quandary for differential diagnosis. No edition of the DSM has ever identified affective instability as a criterion for mania or hypomania, although popular perception sometimes leads both patients and practitioners to assume that moment-to-moment “mood swings” are a defining element of bipolar disorder. Our own group found that community practitioners often diagnose bipolar disorder based mainly on the presence of mood lability—yet, when compared alongside individual DSM-IV symptom criteria for mania or hypomania, “affective instability” had the lowest positive predictive value, and lowest sensitivity, of any symptom predictor for a DSM-IV diagnosis of bipolar I or II disorder.7

As Perugi and colleagues1 note, affective instability is more common in people with than without bipolar disorder; importantly, however, it differs qualitatively from forms of affective instability seen in nonbipolar conditions. For example, in borderline personality disorder, affective vicissitudes typically are reactions “triggered” by interpersonal skirmishes and usually involve “swings” from euthymia to anger, or depression to anxiety, whereas mood states in bipolar patients are less overtly mediated by interpersonal sensitivities and tend more to vary from euthymia to depression, euthymia to elation, or depression to elation.8-10 In fact, emotional dysregulation has been described in the literature as a broad, complex, heterogeneous phenomenon with no fewer than 2 dozen operational definitions,11 spanning numerous psychiatric conditions including posttraumatic stress disorder and substance misuse,12,13 attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD),14 borderline and other personality disorders,15 anxiety disorders,16 and eating disorders.17

Herein lies perhaps the most fundamental challenge facing clinicians, theorists, and future authors of DSM-5.1 and beyond—namely, how best to conceptualize and treat symptoms that overlap diverse psychiatric conditions. The BRIDGE dataset—a laudable and ambitious endeavor of unprecedented international scale—illustrates the shortcomings, given that dilemma of a symptom-shuffling approach to differential diagnosis. Perugi and colleagues1 observe that many adults across the world who seek treatment for depression have complex presentations that often may include substance use disorders, ADHD, and borderline personality disorder. Their proposed “core” symptoms of depressive mixed states—affective instability, irritability, anxiety, and agitation—cut across all of these conditions. While Perugi et al criticize DSM-5 for “arbitrarily” discounting such nonpathognomonic features as these in its reconfiguration of mixed states, it seems scientifically disingenuous to extract symptoms found across common psychiatric comorbidities of major depression and declare them as de facto reflections of bipolarity.

It is hard to formulate a cogent treatment plan before making a careful diagnosis, and the findings on mixed depression by Perugi et al1 raise more questions than answers about therapeutic approaches to depressed patients with mixed features. Antidepressants are generally considered ill-advised when patients with unequivocal bipolar disorder manifest even low-grade symptoms of mania,18 but little if anything is known about whether antidepressants help or hurt anxious, mood-unstable, or agitated nonbipolar depressed patients. Inasmuch as mood destabilization from antidepressants is a relatively rare phenomenon in general19 and seldom seen in nonbipolar I patients,20 should we extrapolate that risk to depressed patients who have never been clearly manic or hypomanic? Affective instability, as a target of pharmacotherapy in borderline personality disorder, responds similarly to antidepressants or mood stabilizers, but overall efficacy appears modest21; would either agent work better to ameliorate affective instability in depressive mixed state patients? And in bipolar disorder itself, quite surprisingly, affective instability has never even been the primary outcome of any published randomized pharmacotherapy trial, making the term mood stabilizer itself something of a misnomer with respect to a drug’s expected pharmacodynamic properties.

Perhaps future studies must examine, rather than presume, the best treatment approaches for complex forms of depression, whether labeled as mixed state, or multicomorbid, or otherwise. When major depression co-occurs with borderline personality disorder (a scenario found about 3 times more often among “mixed depression” BRIDGE patients1), recent longitudinal studies show delayed remission of mood symptoms, and faster relapse, irrespective of the presence of bipolar disorder—prompting calls for “prioritized” treatment of borderline personality features to facilitate recovery from depression.22 Should dialectical behavior therapy therefore become a first-line treatment for depressive mixed states? Or, if affective instability occurs in the setting of major depression plus ADHD, should it be the intended target of treatment with psychostimulants? Or should psychostimulants instead be avoided altogether for fear of unmasking a possible bipolar diathesis? And in unipolar mixed depression patients, should lithium be discouraged based on findings from trials in bipolar disorder showing that depressive symptoms during mania portend an unfavorable response?23

Perhaps NIMH’s decision to discard DSM-5 altogether in favor of its alternatively proposed Research Domain Criteria (RDoC)—where no symptom receives consideration unless it maps to a known gene or brain circuit—partly reflects dismay and resignation at the federal level over the gerrymandering of psychiatric symptoms. Meanwhile, clinicians and patients continue to struggle with how best to understand and treat complex forms of depression with the hope for an eventual clearer direction, by whatever name we call the problem.

Author affiliation: Department of Psychiatry, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York.

Potential conflicts of interest: Dr Goldberg has served as a consultant for Avanir, Merck, MedScape, AstraZeneca, and WebMD; has served on the speakers or advisory board for AstraZeneca, Merck, Sunovion, and Takeda-Lundbeck; has received editorial stipends from Frontline Medical Communications; and has received royalties from American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc.

Funding/support: None reported.

REFERENCES

1. Perugi G, Angst J, Azorin J-M; BRIDGE-II-MIX Study Group, et al. Mixed features in patients with a major depressive episode: the BRIDGE-II-MIX Study. J Clin Psychiatry. 2015;76(3):e351-e358.

2. Cassano GB, Rucci P, Benvenuti A, et al. The role of psychomotor activation in discriminating unipolar from bipolar disorders: a classification-tree analysis. J Clin Psychiatry. 2012;73(1):22-28. PubMed doi:10.4088/JCP.11m06946

3. Koukopoulos A, Sani G. DSM-5 criteria for depression with mixed features: a farewell to mixed depression. Acta Psychiatr Scand. 2014;129(1):4-16. PubMed doi:10.1111/acps.12140

4. Perlis RH, Fava M, Trivedi MH, et al. Irritability is associated with anxiety and greater severity, but not bipolar spectrum features, in major depressive disorder. Acta Psychiatr Scand. 2009;119(4):282-289. PubMed doi:10.1111/j.1600-0447.2008.01298.x

5. Judd LL, Schettler PJ, Coryell W, et al. Overt irritability/anger in unipolar major depressive episodes: past and current characteristics and implications for long-term course. JAMA Psychiatry. 2013;70(11):1171-1180. PubMed doi:10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2013.1957

6. Benazzi F, Akiskal H. Irritable-hostile depression: further validation as a bipolar depressive mixed state. J Affect Disord. 2005;84(2-3):197-207. PubMed doi:10.1016/j.jad.2004.07.006

7. Goldberg JF, Garno JL, Callahan AM, et al. Overdiagnosis of bipolar disorder among substance use disorder inpatients with mood instability. J Clin Psychiatry. 2008;69(11):1751-1757. PubMed doi:10.4088/JCP.v69n1110

8. Koenigsberg HW, Harvey PD, Mitropoulou V, et al. Characterizing affective instability in borderline personality disorder. Am J Psychiatry. 2002;159(5):784-788. PubMed doi:10.1176/appi.ajp.159.5.784

9. Henry C, Mitropoulou V, New AS, et al. Affective instability and impulsivity in borderline personality and bipolar II disorders: similarities and differences. J Psychiatr Res. 2001;35(6):307-312. PubMed doi:10.1016/S0022-3956(01)00038-3

10. Reich DB, Zanarini MC, Fitzmaurice G. Affective lability in bipolar disorder and borderline personality disorder. Compr Psychiatry. 2012;53(3):230-237. PubMed doi:10.1016/j.comppsych.2011.04.003

11. Marwaha S, He Z, Broome M, et al. How is affective instability defined and measured? a systematic review. Psychol Med. 2014;44(9):1793-1808. PubMed doi:10.1017/S0033291713002407

12. Marshall-Berenz EC, Morrison JA, Schumacher JA, et al. Affect intensity and lability: the role of posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms in borderline personality disorder. Depress Anxiety. 2011;28(5):393-399. PubMed doi:10.1002/da.20798

13. Bradley B, DeFife JA, Guarnaccia C, et al. Emotion dysregulation and negative affect: association with psychiatric symptoms. J Clin Psychiatry. 2011;72(5):685-691. PubMed doi:10.4088/JCP.10m06409blu

14. Skirrow C, Asherson P. Emotional lability, comorbidity and impairment in adults with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder. J Affect Disord. 2013;147(1-3):80-86. PubMed doi:10.1016/j.jad.2012.10.011

15. Tragesser SL, Solhan M, Schwartz-Mette R, et al. The role of affective instability and impulsivity in predicting future BPD features. J Pers Disord. 2007;21(6):603-614. PubMed doi:10.1521/pedi.2007.21.6.603

16. Decker ML, Turk CL, Hess B, et al. Emotion regulation among individuals classified with and without generalized anxiety disorder. J Anxiety Disord. 2008;22(3):485-494. PubMed doi:10.1016/j.janxdis.2007.04.002

17. Svaldi J, Griepenstroh J, Tuschen-Caffier B, et al. Emotion regulation deficits in eating disorders: a marker of eating pathology or general psychopathology? Psychiatry Res. 2012;197(1-2):103-111. PubMed doi:10.1016/j.psychres.2011.11.009

18. Pacchiarotti I, Bond DJ, Baldessarini RJ, et al. The International Society for Bipolar Disorders (ISBD) task force report on antidepressant use in bipolar disorders. Am J Psychiatry. 2013;170(11):1249-1262. PubMed doi:10.1176/appi.ajp.2013.13020185

19. Tondo L, Vázquez G, Baldessarini RJ. Mania associated with antidepressant treatment: comprehensive meta-analytic review. Acta Psychiatr Scand. 2010;121(6):404-414. PubMed doi:10.1111/j.1600-0447.2009.01514.x

20. Altshuler LL, Suppes T, Black DO, et al. Lower switch rate in depressed patients with bipolar II than bipolar I disorder treated adjunctively with second-generation antidepressants. Am J Psychiatry. 2006;163(2):313-315. PubMed doi:10.1176/appi.ajp.163.2.313

21. Nosר M, Cipriani A, Biancosino B, et al. Efficacy of pharmacotherapy against core traits of borderline personality disorder: meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. Int Clin Psychopharmacol. 2006;21(6):345-353. PubMed doi:10.1097/01.yic.0000224784.90911.66

22. Gunderson JG, Stout RL, Shea MT, et al. Interactions of borderline personality disorder and mood disorders over 10 years. J Clin Psychiatry. 2014;75(8):829-834. PubMed doi:10.4088/JCP.13m08972

23. Swann AC, Bowden CL, Morris D, et al. Depression during mania: treatment response to lithium or divalproex. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1997;54(1):37-42. PubMed doi:10.1001/archpsyc.1997.01830130041008

Submitted: October 8, 2014; accepted October 14, 2014.

Corresponding author: Joseph F. Goldberg, MD, Psychiatry, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, 128 East Ave, Norwalk, CT 06851 ([email protected]).