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The purpose of the trial is to determine whether a 36-ingredient Micronutrient supplement (primarily vitamins and minerals) and Fish oil (omega-3 fatty acid) supplement improves nutritional status and allows lower doses of conventional medications to be effective for bipolar disorder with fewer side effects, when studied under randomized and fully blinded conditions and compared to a placebo. All participants must live in the vicinity of Bangor, Maine.
Full description
Bipolar disorder is a common neuropsychiatric illness with high rates of morbidity and mortality. Despite available medications to treat bipolar disorder, recurrence rates are high. Bipolar disorder is conventionally treated with typical or antipsychotic medications are well described and include the increased risk of acute kidney injury, cataracts, decreased cognitive function, increased risk for myocardial infarction and stroke, metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes mellitus, and dyslipidemia. Related to this, mortality rates are elevated among people with bipolar disorder compared to the general population. Men with the diagnosis of bipolar disorder live, on average 13.6 years less than the general population, and for women, 12.1 years less.
This RCT (randomized clinical trial) compares a 36-ingredient Micronutrient supplement and Fish oil supplement to matched double placebo in patients randomized to receive one or the other for 52 weeks. One hundred twenty (120) patients are randomized in a 3:2 ratio to Micronutrient + Fish oil or to placebo, respectively. All patients are stably medicated adult outpatients with bipolar disorder (type I or type II). Medical supervision is provided with monthly appointments. At the end of the 52 weeks, all participants will be offered the opportunity of entering a 52-week open-label extension. The primary hypothesis is that active supplementation will allow significantly more reduction of conventional medication than placebo will, without a significant increase in symptoms and with significantly fewer side effects/adverse events.
The objective of this study is to assess the efficacy of Micronutrient supplement + Fish oil compared with placebo in stably medicated adults with bipolar disorder I and II, in improving nutritional status, allowing conventional medication to be effective at lower doses and with fewer side effects at the end of 52 weeks of therapy as assessed under randomized and fully blinded conditions. The primary outcome measure is a composite z-score for side effects, calculated from three separate z-scores that measure medication dosage, illness intensity (Clinical Global Impression score), and adverse side effects (UKU Side Effect score). Secondary outcomes include
Treatment-emergent adverse events are documented at each appointment using the Adverse Event Log. Participants are screened and their suitability for the trial confirmed at the first visit. If suitability is confirmed, informed consent is obtained and they enter the randomized phase. Participants are seen monthly for 12 months, at which time (1) their medication is optimized (graded reduction in dose by 10% per month, upwards if symptoms are above the acceptable level and downwards if an acceptable level of symptom relief has been achieved); (2) symptoms and side effects are recorded; and (3) questionnaires are administered.
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Inclusion criteria
Individuals enrolled will be adult outpatients with a diagnosis of bipolar disorder I or II, receiving care at the Family Medicine Center & Residency Program of Eastern Maine Medical Center in Bangor, Maine. Participants must be able to complete questionnaires and examinations and comply with protocols.
Exclusion criteria
Participants will be excluded from the study for any of the following reasons:
Participation in the study will not alter the participants' clinical care except that they will be provided Micronutrients and Fish oil (or placebos for each) and will participate in a monthly evaluation of the effect of adding these Micronutrients. We will ask them what other supplements they are taking and will instruct them not to take supplements that contain any of the same ingredients that they will receive in the study so as to avoid exceeding the maximum dose allowed.
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120 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Denise Michaud, BS; Janet Bayleran, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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