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Observational evidence and findings from clinical trials conducted for other reasons suggest that lithium, a drug used for the treatment of bipolar disorder, and, to a lesser extent, depression, may reduce rates of suicides and suicide attempts. However, this hypothesis has not yet been adequately examined in a randomized clinical trial conducted specifically to test lithium's efficacy in preventing suicides. This clinical trial fills this gap.
This study is feasible within the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) because it is a large, integrated health system with existing programs for identifying patients at risk for suicide and delivering enhanced services. In VA, approximately 12,000 patients with depression or bipolar disorder survive a suicide attempt or related behavior each year, and 15% of them repeat within one year. Experimental treatment in this study will supplement usual care for major depression or bipolar disorder, as well as VA's standard, enhanced management for patients at high risk.
The investigators will recruit 1862 study participants, from approximately 30 VA Hospitals. Participants will be patients with bipolar disorder or depression who have survived a recent episode of suicidal self-directed violence or were hospitalized specifically to prevent suicide. Randomly, half will receive lithium, and half will receive placebo. Neither the patients nor their doctors will know whether a particular person has received lithium or placebo. The treatment will be administered and the patients will be followed for one year, after which patients will go back to usual care. Recruitment will occur over 3 years.
The investigators are primarily interested in whether lithium leads to increases in the time to the first repeated episode of suicidal behavior, including suicide attempts, interrupted attempts, hospitalizations specifically to prevent suicide, and deaths from suicide. In addition, this study will allow us to explore whether lithium decreases the total number of suicidal behaviors, and whether it has comparable effects on impulsive and non-impulsive behaviors. If there is an effect of lithium, the investigators will be interested in whether or not it could be attributed to improved control of the underlying mental health condition, or, alternatively, whether it represents a direct effect of suicide-related behavior.
Full description
Objective: To test the hypothesis that lithium augmentation of enhanced usual care will reduce the rate of repeated episodes of suicidal self-directed violence (repeated suicide attempts, interrupted attempts, hospitalizations specifically to prevent suicide, and deaths from suicide) in participants with bipolar disorder or depression who have survived a recent event.
Background: The hypothesis that lithium can prevent suicide in patients with bipolar disorder and depression is based on data from observational studies and randomized clinical trials conducted to evaluate other outcomes. The question about the effectiveness of lithium for suicide prevention is one of major scientific, clinical, and public health significance. There have been no adequately powered clinical trials conducted specifically to evaluate suicide behaviors as an outcome. Two recent randomized clinical trials failed to recruit adequate numbers of subjects to be conclusive.
The VHA, as a large national healthcare system with an established program for identifying new suicide attempts, evaluating patients for underlying mental health and medical conditions, providing needed services, connecting Veterans to state-of-the-art suicide risk management, and monitoring outcomes is uniquely able to conduct a large scale clinical trial of lithium for suicide prevention.
The rationale for the study is based on the following:
Design: Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial of lithium versus placebo augmentation of enhanced usual care.
Patient population: VHA patients with bipolar disorder or depression who have survived a recent episode of suicidal self-directed violence.
Primary outcome: Time to the first repeated episode of suicidal self-directed violence, including suicide attempts, interrupted attempts, hospitalizations specifically to prevent suicide, and deaths from suicide
Duration: Total study duration will be 4.5 years. Recruitment will occur over 3 years. Participants will be followed for one year.
Sample size calculations and number of sites required: The design of the study is based on testing for a 37% reduction in the rate of repeated suicidal self-directed violence, a figure based on an effect size of approximately 43% observed in recent studies and then allowing for attenuation due to non-adherence. Adjusting for potential data loss due to attrition, 90% statistical power to detect a significant 37% reduction in reattempt rates at 5% overall type I error would require 1862 subjects. With recruitment of 20% of eligible subjects over a three year period, this would require approximately 9310 potentially eligible subjects. Based on current suicide surveillance data, this could be achieved with 29 sites.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder
Cognitive impairment defined as a Brief Orientation Memory and Concentration Test score > 10
Lack of decision-making capacity to evaluate the risks versus the benefits of participation as determined by Jeste's brief instrument for assessing decisional capacity, or adjudication of incompetence and the appointment of a guardian or conservator
Six or more previous lifetime suicide attempts as ascertained through SPAN, reports from family, or patient self-report
Current or recent (within six months) use of lithium
History of significant adverse effects of lithium as ascertained through the medical record or self-report
Unstable medical conditions or specific medical comorbidity:
Any possibility of being pregnant or not on appropriate birth control
Lactation and breastfeeding
Concurrent medications:
Active substance abuse:
Enrollment in another randomized interventional clinical trial
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519 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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