Pharmacological Treatment of Bipolar Depression: A Review of Observational Studies
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Results
2.1. Systematic Search
2.2. Anticonvulsants
2.3. Second-Generation Antipsychotics
2.4. Lithium
2.5. Antidepressants
2.6. Other Pharmacological Agents
3. Discussion
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. Systematic Search Strategy
4.2. Data Management and Selection Process
4.3. Data Collection Process, Outcomes, and Prioritization
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Author, Year | Sample | Study Design | Substance | Outcome | Findings | GRADE | Side Effects |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ghaemi et al., 2006 [14] | BD1, BD2, BD NOS, depressed (n = 20) | Prospective open label; 8 weeks | Zonisamide | MADRS, SADS | Improvement in all the scales | Very low (50% of patients discontinued; imprecision) | Nausea, vomiting, cognitive impairment, sedation, suicidal ideation, hypomania |
McElroy et al., 2005 [15] | BD1 (n = 42), BD2 (n = 16), BD NOS (n = 2), schizoaffective (n = 2), all depressive state (n = 21) | Prospective open label; 8 weeks | Zonisamide adjunctive therapy | CGI-BP, IDS, YMRS | Depressive patients: decrease in CGI-BP-D and IDS over 8 weeks; 32% classified as responders, with no change in CGI-BP-M or YMRS | Very low (only 7 completed the acute trial; imprecision) | Sedation, tiredness, cognitive impairment, dry mouth, tremors, nausea, diarrhoea, constipation, unsteady gait |
Wang et al., 2002 [16] | BD1, BD2, depressed (n = 22) | Prospective open label; 12 weeks | Gabapentin | HAMD, YMRS, CGI | Overall HAMD decreased 53% | Low | Mild sedation, weight gain, impaired cognition, hypomanic symptoms (but no change in YMRS) |
Wang et al., 2010 [17] | BD2, depressed (n = 28) | Prospective open label, uncontrolled; 7 weeks | Divalproex ER | HAMD, MADRS, YMRS, CGI | Improvement in all scales | Low | Weight gain |
Dilsaver et al., 1996 [18] | BD, depressed (n = 36) | Prospective open label; 3 weeks | Carbamazepine | HAMD | 63% remission | Low | Fever and rush |
McIntyre et al., 2005 [19] | BD1, BD2; depressed (n = 56), mixed (n = 42), hypomanic (n = 8), manic (n = 3) | Prospective open label; 16 weeks | Topiramate | MADRS, YMRS, CGI | Reduction in MADRS and CGI at week 2 and again at week 16; 34% of primarily depressed and 45% of mixed remitted at week 16 | Low | Weight loss and reduction in preexisting tremors |
Montes et al., 2005 [20] | BD1, 2, NOS, cyclothymic disorder (n = 34); start of antidepressant drug (n = 28) | Retrospective chart review | Lamotrigine, either monotherapy or add-on | CGI-BP, number of relapses | Reduction in CGI-BP-D (greater in spectrum group than in BD1); 41% relapsed on a depressive episode | Very low (inconsistency/heterogeneity) | Rash, headache. insomnia, dizziness |
Ahn et al., 2011 [21] | BD1 (n = 15), BD2 (n = 22), BD NOS (n = 1), depressed | Prospective open label naturalistic; 12 weeks | Add-on of lamotrigine or quetiapine | CGI, GAF | Improvement in both groups. Even better improvement with adjunctive quetiapine | Very low (imprecision) | Dry mouth |
Chang et al., 2010 [22] | BD2 (n = 109) | Prospective open label naturalistic; 52 weeks | Lamotrigine | CGI-BP-D | Improvement in CGI-BP-S, maximum effect within 12 weeks 64% responded, amongst them 22.9% discontinuation; amongst non-responders 87.2% discontinuation at 12 weeks | Low | 12.8% headache, 8.3% dizziness, 6.4% non-serious rash, 5.5% tremors |
Joe et al., 2009 [23] | BD depressed (n = 259) | Prospective open label naturalistic; 12 weeks | Lamotrigine | CGI-S, development of rashes | Increase response rate in standard titration versus slower titration; not significant in 7th week | Low | Headache, rashes; reduction in rashes in slower titration |
Kagawa et al., 2017 [24] | BD1 (n = 6), BD2 (n = 22), MDD (n = 19) depressed | Prospective open label; 8 weeks | Lamotrigine, either monotherapy (n = 26) or add-on to valproate (n = 20) | MADRS | 37% responded, no difference between BD and MDD | Very low | Not reported |
Kusumakar et al., 1997 [25] | BD depressed (n = 22) | Prospective open label naturalistic; 6 weeks | Lamotrigine | HAMD | 72% responders (week 4); 63% remitters (week 6) | Low | Headache, tremors of hands, somnolence, dizziness |
Muck-Seler et al., 2008 [26] | BD1 depressed, female (n = 26) | Prospective open label; 6 weeks | Lamotrigine | HAMD, YMRS, reduction in MAO-B activity in platelets and clinical correlation | Decrease in HAMD; decrease in platelet MAO-B activity; no correlation between these two factors | Low | Rashes, no serious adverse effects |
Sajatovic et al., 2011 [27] | BD1, BD2 (n = 57) | Prospective open label; 12 weeks | Lamotrigine | MADRS, HAMD, CGI-BP, WHO-DAS II, UKU | Improvement in MADRS, HAMD, CGI-BP, and most domains of WHO-DAS | Low | None |
Sharma et al., 2008 [28] | BD depressed (n = 31) | Retrospective chart review | Lamotrigine | CGI-S, CGI-I | Improvement in CGI | Very low | Reduced/increased sleep, weight loss/gain, increased dream activity, polyuria, diminished sexual desire, fatigue |
Silveira et al., 2013 [29] | BD1 (n = 17), BD2 (n = 3) depressed | Prospective pen label naturalistic; 8 weeks | Lamotrigine | HAMD, YMRS, CGI-BD | Improvement in HAMD and CGI; 55% remitted | Very low (imprecision) | 25% increase in YMRS (indicating switch to (hypo)mania) |
Author, Year | Sample | Study Design | Substance | Outcome | Findings | GRADE | Side Effects |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bobo et al., 2010 [30] | BD1, BD2, depressed (n = 20) | Prospective open label; 8 weeks | Olanzapine | MADRS, QUIDS-SR, CGI | 9 positive responses (8 with symptom remission) | Low | Weight gain and somnolence |
McInytre et al., 2004 [31] | BD1, BD2, in any state (n = 21) | Prospective open label; 6 months | Either risperidone or olanzapine | MADRS YMRS, CGI, AIMS | Reduction in MADRS (risperidone: 17 to 5, olanzapine: 18 to 7); no differences between the groups | Low | Dizziness, somnolence, weight gain |
Ahn et al., 2011 [21] | BD1 (n = 15), BD2 (n = 22), NOS (n = 1), depressed | Prospective open label naturalistic; 12 weeks | Add-on of either lamotrigine or quetiapine | CGI, GAF | Improvement in both groups; even better in adjunctive quetiapine | Very low (imprecision) | Dry mouth |
Dell’Osso et al., 2012 [32] | MDD (n = 10), BD (n = 20), with residual depressive symptoms | Prospective, open label naturalistic; 6 weeks | Switch from quetiapine IR to ER | HAMD, HAMA, YMRS, CGI-S, BARS, SDS, compliance, functional impairment | Good efficacy with reduction HAMD and HAMA; 72% scored 100% on BARS; no change in compliance, no change in life quality | Low | Insomnia, drowsiness, weight gain, asthenia, constipation |
Kishi et al., 2019 [33] | BD, depressed (olanzapine n = 343; quetiapine n = 224) | Comparison of two RCTs; 6 weeks olanzapine, 8 weeks quetiapine | Comparison of olanzapine and quetiapine ER | MADRS, HAMD | No difference in response and remission | Moderate | Olanzapine greater risk of weight gain and decreased HDL; quetiapine greater risk of somnolence than olanzapine |
Porcelli et al., 2014 [34] | BD, most recent episode depressive (n = 21) | Prospective open label; 1 week | Quetiapine ER | HAMD, HAMA | Reduction in HAMD and HAMA total scores; improvement after 3 days | Low | Activity sleepiness, dry mouth, constipation, lack of appetite, tremors, headache, hypotension |
Shajahan et al., 2010 [35] | Psychotic and non-psychotic depressed (n = 303); thereof BD (n = 38) | Retrospective chart review | Quetiapine | CGI-S, CGI-I | 69% improvement for all depressive subtypes, best improvement in BD mania, followed by BD depression | Low | Sedation, headache, weight gain, abnormal movements, seizure, gastrointestinal disturbance, low white cell count, paresthesia, prolonged Qtc, blurred vision, edema, sexual dysfunction |
Suppes et al., 2007 [36] | BD, depressed (n = 19), cycling (n = 36) | Retrospective chart review, with prospective rating | Quetiapine adjunctive in acute symptomatology | Life chart | Improvement in depression by week 10 No group difference | Very low | Not reported |
Dunn et al., 2008 [37] | BD1 (n = 10), BD2 (n = 7), BD NOS (n = 3), depressed | Prospective open label; Six weeks | Aripiprazole monotherapy and adjunctive treatment | MADRS, YMRS | MADRS improvement, YMRS improved in non-rapid cycling patients | Very low (heterogeneity) | Akathisia, nausea, restlessness, increase in glucose levels (but within normal range) |
Kelly et al., 2017 [38] | BD2, BD NOS (n = 211) | Retrospective chart review | Aripiprazole | CGI-I, GAF | Improvement in CGI-I and GAF; 21% drop-out because of side events | Low | Akathisia, concentration difficulties, nausea, dizziness, tremor, pain, diarrhea, insomnia, hyperglycemia |
Ketter et al., 2006 [39] | BD1, BD2, BD NOS, depressed (n = 30) | Prospective open label; No temporal restriction | Aripiprazole | CGI-S, GAF, CMF depressed mood, suicidal ideation score | 27% responders, 13% remitters, 47% discontinued (17% inefficacy, 10% patient choice, 20% adverse events) | Very low (heterogeneity, imprecision) | Switch to hypomania, weight change, sedation, nausea, constipation, agitation, cognitive problems; one required cholecystectomy |
Malempati et al., 2015 [40] | BD1, BD2, depressed (n = 40) | Prospective open label; 2 years | Aripiprazole adjunctive treatment | MADRS, CGI-S, CGI-I, YMRS, SDS | Improvements in MADRS by 6 weeks and CGI-I by six months; complete functional recovery on the Sheehan Disability Scale | Low | Mild weight gain, activation, EPS |
Mazza et al., 2008 [41] | BD1, BD2, BD NOS, depressed (n = 85) | Prospective open label; 16 weeks | Aripiprazole, either monotherapy or adjunctive | MADRS, CGI-S, YMRS | 94.1% decrease in MADRS and CGI scores, regardless of whether monotherapy (22/39 responded, 12/39 remitted) or adjunctive treatment (30/46 responded, 18/46 remitted) | Low | Insomnia, headaches, dizziness, akathisia |
Mazza et al., 2009 [42] | BD1 (n = 50), depressed | Prospective open label; 16 weeks | Aripiprazole monotherapy | MADRS, SHAPS | Reduction in MADRS: 66% response, 34% remission; Reduction in SHAPS: 52% anhedonia at baseline, 20% at end | Low | Akathisia, headache |
McElroy et al., 2007 [43] | BD1, BD2, BD NOS, depressed (n = 31) | Prospective open label; 8 weeks | Aripiprazole monotherapy and adjunctive | MADRS, CGI-BP-D, YMRS | Globally 42% responders, 35% remitters; amongst those who completed: 38.5% responders, 30.8% remitters (monotherapy); 44.4% responders, 38.9% remitters (adjunctive therapy) | Low | 29% discontinuation because of side effects: akathisia, insomnia, activation, nausea, increased/decreased appetite, headache, tremor, anxiety, concentration difficulty, fatigue, blurred vision, increased urinary frequency, muscle soreness, manic symptoms |
Ketter et al., 2016 [44] | BD1 (n = 817) | Prospective open label multicenter; 24 weeks | Lurasidone monotherapy (38.9%) and adjunctive to lithium or valproate (61.1%) | MADRS, CGI-BP-S, HAMA, Q-LES-Q-SF, SDS, BARS, AIMS, YMRS, C-SSRS | Improvement from baseline study in all scales | Moderate | 6.9% in monotherapy and 9% of adjunctive group discontinuation because of adverse effects; during extension period: worsening depression, suicidal ideation, bone fractures, suicide attempt, mania |
Miller et al., 2018 [45] | BD1 (n = 32), BD2 (n = 26), NOS (n = 3) | Prospective open label naturalistic; no temporal restriction | Lurasidone, mainly adjunctive | Discontinuation, CGI-BP-S | CGI-BP-S decreased in depressed (5.2 to 4.3); no change observed in subsyndromal depression | Low | 54% discontinued because of side effects: Akathisia, sedation, weight gain |
Liebowitz et al., 2009 [46] | BD2, depressed (n = 30) | Prospective open label; 8 weeks | Ziprasidone | HAMD, HAMA, MADRS, YMRS, CGI-S, BDI, Q-LES-Q | 30% responders and 17% remitters (after 1 week), 60% responders, 43% remitters by end of the treatment | Low | Muscle stiffness, insomnia, low white blood cell count, nervousness, tremor, headache, mood swings, drowsiness |
Mac Fadden et al., 2011 [47] | BD1, BD2, depressed (n = 59), manic/mixed (n = 103) | Prospective open label first phase; 12 weeks | LAI risperidone | CGI-BP-S, MADRS, YMRS | 53.3% remission | Low | Tremor, muscle rigidity, weight increase, headache |
Brown et al., 2019 [48] | BD1, BD2, most recent episode depressed (n = 21) | Prospective open label; 8 weeks | Brexpiprazole | MADRS, IDS-SR30, QOLBD, RAVLT, TMT | Reduction in MADRS and IDS-SR30 | Low | Akathisia |
Author, Year | Sample | Study Design | Substance | Outcome | Findings | GRADE | Side Effects |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Amsterdam et al., 1997 [56] | BD, depressed (n = 49), MDD, depressed (n = 566) | Prospective open label, 8 weeks | Fluoxetine (20 mg) | HAMD | 411 responders; no correlation between plasma concentration and clinical outcome | Low | Not reported |
Amsterdam et al., 2010 [57] | BD, depressed (n = 148) | Prospective open label; 14 weeks | Fluoxetine monotherapy (20–80 mg) | HAMD, YMRS | 88 responders, 86 remitters; mean time to remission 64.4 days | Low | n = 6 hypomania headache, yawning, nausea, reduced appetite, upper respiratory tract infection, decreased libido, delayed orgasm, increased blood pressure |
Amsterdam et al., 2013 [58] | BD, rapid cycling (n = 42), BD, non-rapid cycling (n = 124); same cohort [57] | Prospective open label; 14 weeks | Fluoxetine monotherapy (10–80 mg) | HAMD, YMRS, CGI | Response and remission comparable in both groups; higher decrease in HAMD score in rapid cycling | Low | n = 6 hypomania, equal in both groups, n = 1 attempted suicide, n = 1 manic episode |
Baldassano et al., 1995 [59] | BD1 (n = 19), BD2 (n = 1) | Retrospective chart review | Paroxetine (10–40 mg), mostly adjunctive | HAMD, CGI, GAF | 65% improved “much” or “very much”; GAF mean improved from 44.4 to 60.4 | Very low (heterogeneity) | n = 1 hypomania, n = 1 rapid cycling, both with history of drug-induced switch |
Fonseca et al., 2006 [60] | BD1, BD2, depressed (n = 20) | Prospective open label; 12 weeks | Escitalopram (10 mg), adjunctive | HAMD, CGI-S, CGI-I, YMRS | Decrease in HAMD (mean 20.9 baseline versus 8.9 end), CGI-S (4.8 versus 1.5), CGI-I | Low | n = 4 discontinuation, because of switch (n = 1), hypomanic symptoms (n = 2), hospitalization, psychosis, suicidal ideation (n = 1); 75% had at least one adverse effect: headache, somnolence, nausea, mood switch, suicidal ideation |
Kupfer et al., 2001 [61] | BD1, BD2 (n = 45; 12 dropped out before week 8) | Prospective open label; 8 weeks | Citalopram (20–80 mg), adjunctive | HAMD, CGI-I, YMRS | 21/33 responded in all scales after 8 weeks; of them, 14/19 remitted after 16 additional weeks | Low | 37/45 only mild to moderate headache, nausea, diarrhea, sexual dysfunction, mania; no study discontinuation because of adverse events |
Mertens et al., 1989 [62] | BD or MDD, depressed (n = 70) | Prospective double blind; 6 weeks | Paroxetine (30 mg) or mianserin (60 mg) | HAMD | Improve in HAMD in paroxetine (28.5 baseline versus 11.5 end) and mianserin (30.8 versus 17.8); no group difference | Low | Both drugs well-tolerated, with nausea and headache in four patients, with somnolence in six patients |
Serafini et al., 2010 [63] | BD (n = 49), MDD (n = 13) | Prospective open label; 12 weeks | Duloxetine or venlafaxine, mostly adjunctive | HAMA, HAMD, SF-36 | Duloxetine (90.3% response, 48.4% remission with < 8) more effective in all scales than venlafaxine | Low | Hypertension (with venlafaxine), nausea (duloxetine), hypomania (both drugs) |
Kocsis et al., 1990 [64] | Psychotic depressed: BD (n = 12), MDD (n = 13); severely depressed: BD (n = 13), MDD (n = 40); moderately depressed: BD (n = 22), MDD (n = 32) | Prospective open label; 4 weeks | Amitryptiline or imipramine for four weeks, after 2 weeks drug-free (placebo) | HAMD, SADS, depression severity | Good outcome in 67% of moderately (HAMD 21 baseline versus 10 end) versus 39% severely depressed (33 versus 17) versus 32% psychotic depressed (35 versus 22) Better response in moderate than severe depression; no difference between severly depressed with and without psychosis; no differences between BD and MDD | Low | Not reported |
Calabrese et al., 2007 [65] | BD1, depressed (n = 21) | Prospective open label; 6 weeks, optional +46 weeks | Agomelatine (25 mg), adjunctive to lithium or valproate | HAMD, MADRS, CGI | 81% response; 47.6% response after 1 week; no difference in taking lithium or valproate | Low | Anxiety, agitation, breast abscess, social problem, bereavement reaction, traffic accident; one drug-related manic switch |
Fornaro et al., 2013 [66] | BD2, depressed (n = 28) | Prospective open label; 6 weeks, optional +30 weeks | Agomelatine (25 mg), adjunctive to lithium or valproate | HAMD, YMRS | 64% response after six weeks and 86% after 36 weeks; taking lithium responded in 54.5% after 6 weeks and in 90.9% after 36 weeks and taking valproate in 70.6 respectively 82.4% | Low | Four patients with valproate and agomelatine: pseudo-vertigo and hypomania; two patients with lithium and agomelatine: insomnia and mania and, therefore, dropped out at week 6; Two more cases of hypomania at week 36 |
Ionescu et al., 2015 [67] | BD1, BD2 (n = 36) | Prospective open label; spin-off of double-blind RCT; single infusion | Ketamine 0.5 mg/kg IV as adjunctive therapy to lithium or valproate | MADRS, HDRS, HAM-A, CADSS | Significant reduction in all scales, in both anxious (MADRS 33 to 18) and non-anxious groups (MADRS 33 to 20) | Low | Unspecified; no difference between anxious and non-anxious groups |
Lara et al., 2013 [95] | BD, MDD (n = 26) | Prospective open label; 1–20 doses every 2–3 days | Ketamine sublingual, start 0.1 mL, up titration up to 10 mg, then 7 stable doses | Not standardized questions about mood/sleep/cognition | 77% remission or clear response on depression, mood instability, cognitive impairment, poor sleep | Very low (imprecision) | No manic, psychotic, or dissociative symptoms were observed, but two bipolar patients reported agitation for a few hours; mild light-headedness was a common but transient side-effect, subsiding typically in < 30 min, more pronounced or present only after the first dose |
Li et al., 2022 [76] | BD, MDD (n = 109) | Prospective open label; 6 infusions in 12 days; 9-month observation | Ketamine 0.5 mg/kg IV | PHQ-9, GAF | Of 56 responders, 46.4% remained stable after 9 months, 25% relapsed within two weeks | Low | Not reported |
McIntyre et al., 2020 [68] | BD (n = 30), MDD (n = 183); After 4 infusions, n = 107 | Prospective open label; 4 infusions in 7–8 days | Ketamine 0.5 mg/kg IV as adjunctive | QUIDS, GAD-7, SDS | 27% response (QUIDS total score reduction ≥ 50%, 13% remission; positive effect on anxiety, overall psychosocial function, suicidal ideation | Low | During/after infusion: 48.2%/49.2% dizziness, 57.1%/53.1% drowsiness, 43.5%/25.1% confusion, 38.2%/17.6% depersonalization, 40.8%/16.7% derealization, 31.9%/29.8% blurred vision, 20.8%/18.8% double vision, 13.9%/11.1% nausea, 13.2%/19.3% headache |
McIntyre et al., 2021 [69] | BD (n = 48), MDD (n = 259, other depressed (n = 11), after 4 infusions, n = 142); partly overlapping cohort [68] | Prospective open label; 4 infusions in 7–8 days | Ketamine 0.5 mg/kg IV as adjunctive | QUIDS, SDS | Total functional disability; the subdomains social life and family life/home responsibilities significantly moderate ketamine response | Low | Not reported |
Pennybaker et al., 2018 [70] | BD, MDD (n = 122) | Data of four open, prospective, partially placebo-controlled trials; single infusion | Ketamine 0.5 mg/kg IV, in BD adjunctive to lithium or valproate | MADRS, HAMD, YMRS, CADDS, BDI | 32.5% antidepressant response after 24 h, 12.9% after two weeks (only 93/122 were assessed at two weeks);responders at week two had a greater response after 230 min and after 24 h than two-week non-responders | Low | Not reported |
Permoda-Osip et al., 2013 [71] | BD1, BD2 (n = 20) | Prospective open label; single infusion | Ketamine 0.5 mg/kg IV, adjunctive | HAMD | 10/20 responders | Low | Not reported |
Rybakowski et al., 2013 [72] | BD, depressed (n = 25) | Prospective open label; single infusion | Ketamine 0.5 mg/kg IV | HAMD | After 24 h: 6/20 responders, 4/20 remitters; after 7 days: 13/20 responders, 8/20 remitters; no correlation with neurotrophins (apart from reduction in BDNF levels after 7 days in non-responders) | Low | Not reported |
Zheng et al., 2018 [73] | BD, depressed (n = 20); MDD, depressed (n = 77) | Prospective open label; 6 infusions in 12 days | Ketamine 0.5 mg/kg IV, adjunctive | MADRS, SSI, HAM-A, BPRS, CADSS, HAMD | Response rate 68%, remission rate 50.5% | Low | Mild temporary dissociative and psychotomimetic symptoms. No differences between responders and non-responders |
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Fellendorf, F.T.; Caboni, E.; Paribello, P.; Pinna, M.; D’Aloja, E.; Carucci, S.; Pinna, F.; Reininghaus, E.Z.; Carpiniello, B.; Manchia, M. Pharmacological Treatment of Bipolar Depression: A Review of Observational Studies. Pharmaceuticals 2023, 16, 182. https://doi.org/10.3390/ph16020182
Fellendorf FT, Caboni E, Paribello P, Pinna M, D’Aloja E, Carucci S, Pinna F, Reininghaus EZ, Carpiniello B, Manchia M. Pharmacological Treatment of Bipolar Depression: A Review of Observational Studies. Pharmaceuticals. 2023; 16(2):182. https://doi.org/10.3390/ph16020182
Chicago/Turabian StyleFellendorf, Frederike T., Edoardo Caboni, Pasquale Paribello, Martina Pinna, Ernesto D’Aloja, Sara Carucci, Federica Pinna, Eva Z. Reininghaus, Bernardo Carpiniello, and Mirko Manchia. 2023. "Pharmacological Treatment of Bipolar Depression: A Review of Observational Studies" Pharmaceuticals 16, no. 2: 182. https://doi.org/10.3390/ph16020182
APA StyleFellendorf, F. T., Caboni, E., Paribello, P., Pinna, M., D’Aloja, E., Carucci, S., Pinna, F., Reininghaus, E. Z., Carpiniello, B., & Manchia, M. (2023). Pharmacological Treatment of Bipolar Depression: A Review of Observational Studies. Pharmaceuticals, 16(2), 182. https://doi.org/10.3390/ph16020182