Symptom networks in acute depression across bipolar and major depressive disorders: A network analysis on a large, international, observational study.

2020 
Abstract Major Depressive Episode (MDE) is a transdiagnostic nosographic construct straddling Major Depressive (MDD) and Bipolar Disorder (BD). Prognostic and treatment implications warrant a differentiation between these two disorders. Network analysis is a novel approach that outlines symptoms interactions in psychopathological networks. We investigated the interplay among depressive and mixed symptoms in acutely depressed MDD/BD patients, using a data-driven approach. We analyzed 7 DSM-IV-TR criteria for MDE and 14 researched-based criteria for mixed features (RBDC) in 2758 acutely depressed MDD/BD patients from the BRIDGE-II-Mix study. The global network was described in terms of symptom thresholds and symptom centrality. Symptom endorsement rates were compared across diagnostic subgroups. Subsequently, MDD/BD differences in symptom-network structure were examined using permutation-based network comparison test. Mixed symptoms were the most central and highly interconnected nodes in the network, particularly agitation followed by irritability. Despite mixed symptoms, appetite gain and hypersomnia were significantly more endorsed in BD patients, associations between symptoms were highly correlated across MDD/BD (Spearman's r = 0.96, p
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