You are on page 1of 18

Review

Risk factors for suicide in bipolar disorder: A systematic review


Lucas da Silva Costa
a,n
, tila Pereira Alencar
a
, Pedro Janurio Nascimento Neto
a
,
Maria do Socorro Vieira dos Santos
a
, Cludio Gleidiston Lima da Silva
b
,
Sally de Frana Lacerda Pinheiro
b
, Regiane Teixeira Silveira
b
, Bianca Alves Vieira Bianco
b
,
Roberto Flvio Fontenelle Pinheiro Jnior
c
, Marcos Antonio Pereira de Lima
c
,
Alberto Olavo Advincula Reis
d
, Modesto Leite Rolim Neto
e
a
Laboratrio de Escrita Cientca, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade Federal do Cariri, UFCA, Barbalha, Cear, Brazil
b
Programa de Ps-Graduao em Cincias da Sade, Faculdade de Medicina do ABC, Santo Andr, So Paulo, Brazil
c
Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade Federal do Cariri, UFCA, Barbalha, Cear, Brazil
d
Programa de Ps-Graduao em Sade Pblica, Faculdade de Sade Pblica, Universidade de So Paulo, USP, So Paulo, So Paulo, Brazil
e
Lder de Grupo de Pesquisa em Suicidologia, Universidade Federal do Cear, UFC/Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientco e Tecnolgico, CNPq,
Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade Federal do Cariri, UFCA, Barbalha, Cear, Brazil
a r t i c l e i n f o
Article history:
Received 30 July 2014
Received in revised form
18 August 2014
Accepted 2 September 2014
Available online 16 September 2014
Keywords:
Bipolar
Suicide
Risk factors
a b s t r a c t
Background: Bipolar disorder confers the highest risk of suicide among major psychological disorders.
The risk factors associated with bipolar disorder and suicide exist and are relevant to clinicians and
researchers.
Objective: The aim of the present study was to conduct a systematic review of articles regarding the
suicide risk factors in bipolar disorder.
Methods: A systematic review of articles on suicide risk factors in bipolar disorder, published from
January 1, 2010 to April 05, 2014, on SCOPUS and PUBMED databases was carried out. Search terms were
Suicide (medical subject headings [MeSH]), Risk factors (MeSH), and Bipolar (keyword). Of the 220
retrieved studies, 42 met the eligibility criteria.
Results: Bipolar disorder is associated with an increased rate death by suicide which contributes to
overall mortality rates. Studies covered a wide range of aspects regarding suicide risk factors in bipolar
disorder, such as risk factors associated to Sociodemographic conditions, Biological characteristics, Drugs
Relationships, Psychological Factors, Genetic Compound, Religious and Spirituals conditions. Recent
scientic literature regarding the suicide risk factors in bipolar disorder converge to, directly or indirectly,
highlight the negative impacts of risk factors to the affected population quality of life.
Conclusion: This review demonstrated that Bipolar disorders commonly leads to other psychiatric
disorders and co-morbidities involving risk of suicide. Thus the risk factors are relevant to have a better
diagnosis and prognosis of BD cases involving risk of suicide.
& 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Contents
1. Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 238
2. Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 238
3. Results . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 238
4. Discussion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 239
4.1. Risk factors associated with sociodemographic components . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 246
Contents lists available at ScienceDirect
journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/jad
Journal of Affective Disorders
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2014.09.003
0165-0327/& 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
n
Correspondence to: Laboratrio de Escrita Cientca, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade Federal do Cariri, UFCA, Rua Divino Salvador, 284, 63180-000, Barbalha, Cear,
Brazil. Tel.: 55 88 3312 5000; fax: 55 88 3312 5001.
E-mail address: lucas_10_00@hotmail.com (L.d.S. Costa).
Journal of Affective Disorders 170 (2015) 237254
4.2. Risk factors associated with genetic components . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 247
4.3. Risk factors associated with medicines and drugs in general that interfere with bipolar disorder. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 248
4.4. Risk factors associated with biological components . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 248
4.5. Risk factors associated with psychological causes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 249
4.6. Risk factors associated with components of religious and spiritual components. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 250
5. Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 251
Role of funding source . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 251
Conict of interest. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 251
Acknowledgments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 251
References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 251
1. Introduction
Bipolar disorder confers the highest risk of suicide among
major psychological disorders (Goldstein et al., 2012; Goodwin
and Jamison, 2007). Suicide attempts and completed suicide are
signicantly more common in patients with bipolar disorder when
compared with the general population (Eroglu et al., 2013; Simon
et al., 2007; Weissman et al., 1999).
Bipolar spectrum disorders, especially recurrent depressive epi-
sodes, is the major risk of repeated suicide attempt and co-morbidity
of another psychiatric disorders increase highly the risk of suicide
reattempt (Kheirabadi et al., 2012). In particular, among mental
disorders, bipolar disorder is one of the leading causes of suicidal
behaviors and this is a major issue in the management of the disease.
About 50% of patients with bipolar disorder will experience at least
one suicide attempt (Jamison, 2000) and 1119% will commit suicide
(Goodwin and Jamison, 2007; Abreu et al., 2009; Angst et al., 2005;
Harris and Barraclough, 1997; Parmentier et al., 2012).
This study is based on the following research question: what is
the main suicide risk factors associated with bipolar disorder? This
issue has gained great impact in recent years with the establish-
ment of new risk factors for suicide and bipolar disorder. Thus, this
systematic review aims to present the main risk factors and
compares them, since the applicant was disagreement among
authors. Therefore, it is suggested, that further studies are needed
in order to establish a stronger relationship between bipolar
disorder and its risk factors that culminate in suicide.
2. Methods
We performed a qualitative systematic review of articles about
suicide risk factors in bipolar affective disorder in previously
chosen electronic databases.
A search of the literature was conducted via PubMed and
SCOPUS online databases in April 2014 and was limited to articles
published from January 1, 2010 to April 6, 2014. The reason for
limiting the search to 20102014 was that, during this period,
there was an expansion of research into new types of comorbid-
ities that inuence the risk of suicide in Bipolar disorder, such as
hopelessness, altitude and religiosity. Therefore, the Bipolar Affec-
tive Disorder and its association with suicide had greater relevance
in the scientic community.
Initially, the search terms browsed in SCOPUS database were
1. bipolar (keyword);
2. suicide (Medical Subject Headings [MeSH] term); and
3. risk factors (MeSH term).
The following searches were performed: 1 AND 2 AND 3.
In addition to MeSH terms, we opted to add the keyword bipolar
to the search strategy, because, despite not being included in the
MeSH thesaurus, it is frequently used to describe studies that deal
with the theme object of the present review. The search strategy
and the retrieved articles were reviewed on two separate occa-
sions to ensure adequate sampling. A similar search strategy was
performed in the PubMed database, using the aforementioned
terms and their correspondent terms.
The article analysis followed previously determined eligibility
criteria. We adopted the following inclusion criteria: Goldstein
et al. (2012) references written in English; Goodwin and Jamison
(2007) studies pertaining suicide risk factors in bipolar affective
disorder; Eroglu et al., (2013) original articles with online acces-
sible full text available in database SCOPUS, PubMed or CAPES
(Higher Education Co-ordination Agency) Journal Portal
(Periodicos.capes.gov.br, 2014), a virtual library linked to Brazil's
Ministry of Education and subjected to content subscription;
(Simon et al., 2007) articles that included in the title at least one
combination of terms described in the search strategy; (Weissman
et al., 1999) case reports, cohort studies, controlled clinical trials
and case-control studies; Kheirabadi et al. (2012) articles that
appear in more than one database will be included only once,
giving priority to the SCOPUS database. Exclusion criteria were:
Goldstein et al. (2012) studies that did not include the proposed
topic; Goodwin and Jamison (2007) non-original studies, including
editorials, reviews, prefaces, brief communications and letters to
the editor.
Then, each paper in the sample was read in entirety, and data
elements were then extracted and entered into a matrix that
included authors, journal, description of the study sample, and
main ndings. Some of the studies dealt not only with the risk
factors associated with bipolar disorder, but also to the risk factors
in other psychiatric disorders, such as schizophrenia and mood
disorder; because the focus of this study was the risk factors
associated with suicide in bipolar disorder, studies related to
psychiatric disorders in general were not recorded or analyzed
for this study.
To provide a better analysis, the next phase involved comparing
the studies and grouping. For heuristic reasons, the results regarding
the studied subject into six categories: Risk factors associated with
sociodemographic components; Risk factors associated with genetic
components; Risk factors associated with Medicines and Drugs in
general that interfere with bipolar disorder; Risk factors associated
with Biological components; Risk factors associated with Psycholo-
gical causes; and Risk factors associated with components of Reli-
gious and Spiritual components.
3. Results
Initially, the aforementioned search strategies resulted in 220
references. After browsing the title and abstract of the retrieved
citations for eligibility based on study inclusion criteria, 178 articles
were excluded and 42 articles were further retrieved and included
L.d.S. Costa et al. / Journal of Affective Disorders 170 (2015) 237254 238
in the nal sample Fig. 1). Articles from SCOPUS and PubMed
database matched the inclusion criteria of the present study.
Table 1 provides an overview of all studies included in the nal
sample and of all data elements used during the data analysis
process. Study designs included one case report (Kerner et al.,
2013), seven transversal studies (Goldstein et al., 2012; Kheirabadi
et al., 2012; Undurraga et al., 2012; De Abreu et al., 2012; Algorta
et al., 2011; Evans et al., 2012; Gomes et al., 2010), nineteen cohort
studies (Parmentier et al., 2012; Huber et al., 2014; Ruengorn et al.,
2012; Etain et al., 2013; Cassidy, 2011; Baldessarini et al., 2012;
Bellivier et al., 2011; Sears et al., 2013; Jimnez et al., 2013; Leon
et al., 2012; Finseth et al., 2012; Oquendo et al., 2010; Kenneson
et al., 2013; Gilbert et al., 2011; Shabani et al., 2013; Pompili et al.,
2012; Acosta et al., 2012; Song et al., 2012; Suttajit et al., 2013), and
fteen case-control studies (Eroglu et al., 2013; Antypa et al., 2013;
Ryu et al., 2010; Manchia et al., 2013; Neves et al., 2010; Magno
et al., 2011; Yoon et al., 2011; Arias et al., 2013; Clements et al.,
2013; Pawlak et al., 2013; Kamali et al., 2012; de Moraes et al.,
2013; Azorin et al., 2013; Dervic et al., 2011; Pawlak et al., 2013).
The 42 studies were distributed into the previously determined six
categories as follows:
Risk factors associated with sociodemographic components
(seven studies) (Huber et al., 2014; De Abreu et al., 2012;
Ruengorn et al., 2012; Algorta et al., 2011; Cassidy, 2011; Antypa
et al., 2013; Ryu et al., 2010); Risk factors associated with genetic
components (six studies) (Manchia et al., 2013; Sears et al., 2013;
Neves et al., 2010; Magno et al., 2011; Jimnez et al., 2013; Kerner
et al., 2013); Risk factors associated with Medicines and Drugs in
general that interfere with bipolar disorder (eight studies)
(Bellivier et al., 2011; Yoon et al., 2011; Leon et al., 2012; Arias
et al., 2013; Clements et al., 2013; Finseth et al., 2012; Oquendo
et al., 2010; Kenneson et al., 2013); Risk factors associated with
Biological components (three studies) (Kamali et al., 2012; Evans
et al., 2012; Gomes et al., 2010); Risk factors associated with
Psychological causes (seven studies) (Parmentier et al., 2012;
Shabani et al., 2013; Pompili et al., 2012; Acosta et al., 2012;
Song et al., 2012; Suttajit et al., 2013; Stewart et al., 2009); and Risk
factors associated with components of Religious and Spiritual
(three studies) components (Azorin et al., 2013; Dervic et al.,
2011; Pawlak et al., 2013). Among the 42 studies, 8 discussed about
suicide risk factors in Bipolar Affective disorder more broadly
(Goldstein et al., 2012; Eroglu et al., 2013; Kheirabadi et al., 2012;
Undurraga et al., 2012; Etain et al., 2013; Baldessarini et al., 2012;
Pawlak et al., 2013; Gilbert et al., 2011), being refered in more than
one category. The categorization of studies aims to a better
organizational quality systematic review and it is not compulsory
that each article must be referenced only in their respective
category.
4. Discussion
Bipolar disorder (BD) is a major public health concern worldwide,
and is associated with signicant morbidity and mortality (Kupfer,
2005). In addition to an increased rate of death by suicide, community
and clinical studies indicate that bipolar patients usually present a
broadrange of comorbid general medical conditions, which contribute
Fig. 1. Flow chart showing study selections for the review. Abbreviations MeSH, Medical Subject Headings.
L.d.S. Costa et al. / Journal of Affective Disorders 170 (2015) 237254 239
Table 1
Suicide risk factors in bipolar affective disorder: studies and main ndings.
Authors Journal Sample Main ndings
Goldstein et al.
(2012)
Archives of General
Psychiatry
A total of 413 youths (mean [SD] age, 12.6 [3.3] years) who received
a diagnosis of bipolar I disorder (n244), bipolar II disorder
(n28), or bipolar disorder not otherwise specied (n141).
Of the 413 youths with bipolar disorder, 76 (18%)
made at least 1 suicide attempt within 5 years of
study intake; of these, 31 (8% of the entire sample
and 41% of attempters) made multiple attempts. Girls
had higher rates of attempts than did boys, but rates
were similar for bipolar subtypes. The most potent
past and intake predictors of prospectively examined
suicide attempts included severity of depressive
episode at study intake and family history of
depression. Follow-up data were aggregated over
8-week intervals; greater number of weeks spent
with threshold depression, substance use disorder,
and mixed mood symptoms and greater number of
weeks spent receiving outpatient psychosocial
services in the preceding 8-week period predicted
greater likelihood of a suicide attempt.
Eroglu et al.
(2013)
Dusunen Adam One hundred twenty two consecutive patients, from Bipolar
Disorder Unit of ukurova University, Faculty of Medicine,
Department of Psychiatry, are included in this study.
The prevalence of suicide attempt was 19.7% in the
outpatient group. Lifetime history of suicidal
behavior was signicantly associated with following
characteristics: being a woman, depression as a rst
episode and indicators of severity of bipolar disorder
including duration of illness, duration of untreated
illness (latency), number of hospitalization, number
of total mood episodes, number of depressive
episodes, number of mixed episodes, positive familial
psychiatric disorder history.
Kheirabadi
et al. (2012)
Iranian Journal of
Epidemiology
Participants consisted of 703 individuals (424 of themwere female)
with mean age of 25.979.7.
Bipolar spectrum disorders, unipolar depression and
adjustment disorders were the more frequents
psychiatric disorders respectively. Age, family history
of suicide, kind of diagnosed psychiatric disorder and
method of attempted suicide were meaningfully
related to mean of attempt suicide frequency.
Parmentier
et al. (2012)
European Psychiatry In a sample of 652 euthymic bipolar patients, we assessed clinical
features with the Diagnostic Interview for Genetics Studies (DIGS)
and dimensional characteristics with questionnaires measuring
impulsivity/hostility and affective lability/intensity.
Of the 652 subjects, 42.9% had experienced at least
one suicide attempt. Lifetime history of suicidal
behavior was associated with being a woman, a
history of head injury, tobacco misuse and indicators
of severity of bipolar disorder including early age at
onset, high number of depressive episodes, positive
history of rapid cycling, alcohol misuse and social
phobia. Indirect hostility and irritability were
dimensional characteristics associated with suicidal
behavior in bipolar patients, whereas impulsivity and
affective lability/intensity were not associated with
suicidal behavior.
Huber et al.
(2014)
Medical Hypotheses Data were available for 16 states for the years 20052008,
representing a total of 35,725 completed suicides in 922 U.S.
counties.
Altitude was a signicant, independent predictor of
the altitude at which suicides occurred (F8.28,
p0.004 and Wald chi-square. 21.67, po 0.0001).
Least squares means of altitude, independent of
other variables, indicated that individuals with BD
committed suicide at the greatest mean altitude.
Moreover, the mean altitude at which suicides
occurred in BD was signicantly higher than in
decedents whose mental health diagnosis was major
depressive disorder (MDD), schizophrenia, or anxiety
disorder.
Undurraga
et al. (2012)
Journal of Clinical
Psychiatry
Accordingly, we compared selected demographic and clinical
factors for long-term association with nonlethal suicidal acts or
ideation in 290 DSM-IV bipolar I (n204) and II (n86) disorder
patients followed for a mean of 9.3 years at the University of
Barcelona, using preliminary bivariate comparisons followed by
multivariate logistic regression modeling.
Rates of suicidal ideation (41.5%) and acts (19.7%)
were similarly prevalent with bipolar I and II
disorders and somewhat more common among
women. Factors signicantly and independently
associated with suicidal acts were determined by
multivariate modeling and ranked in order of their
strength of association: suicidal ideation, more
mixed episodes, Axis II comorbidity, female sex,
more antidepressant trials, rapid cycling,
predominant lifetime depression, having been
hospitalized, older onset, and longer delay of
diagnosis.
De Abreu et al.
(2012)
Comprehensive Psychiatry One hundred eight patients with Diagnostic and Statistical Manual
of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition BD type I (44 with previous
Patients with BD and previous suicide attempts had
signicantly lower scores in all the 4 domains of the
L.d.S. Costa et al. / Journal of Affective Disorders 170 (2015) 237254 240
Table 1 (continued )
Authors Journal Sample Main ndings
suicide attempts, 64 without previous suicide attempts) were
studied.
World Health Organization's Quality of Life
Instrument-Short Version scale than did patients
with BD but no previous suicide attempts (physical
domain P0.001; psychological domain Po0.0001;
social domain P0.001, and environmental domain
P 0.039). In the euthymic subgroup (n70),
patients with previous suicide attempts had
signicantly lower scores only in the psychological
and social domains (P0.020 and P0.004).
Limitations: This was a cross-sectional study, and no
causal associations can be assumed.
Ruengorn et al.
(2012)
Psychology Research and
Behavior Management
Medical les of 489 patients diagnosed with BD at Suanprung
Psychiatric Hospital between October 2006 and May 2009 were
reviewed.
Six statistically signicant indicators associated with
suicide attempts were included in the risk-scoring
scheme: depression, psychotic symptom(s), number
of previous suicide attempts, stressful life event(s),
medication adherence, and BD treatment years. A
total risk score (possible range 1.511.5) explained
an 88.6% probability of suicide attempts based on the
receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis.
Likelihood ratios of suicide attempts with low risk
scores (below 2.5), moderate risk scores (2.5-8.0),
and high risk scores (above 8.0) were 0.11 (95% CI
0.04-0.32), 1.72 (95% CI 1.412.10), and 19.0 (95% CI
6.17-58.16), respectively.
Algorta et al.
(2011)
Bipolar Disorders Participants were 138 youths aged 518years presenting to
outpatient clinics with DSM-IV diagnoses of bipolar I disorder
(n27), bipolar II disorder (n18), cyclothymic disorder (n48),
and bipolar disorder not otherwise specied (n45).
Twenty PBD patients had lifetime suicide attempts,
63 had past or current suicide ideation, and 55 were
free of suicide ideation and attempts. Attempters
were older than nonattempters. Suicide ideation and
attempts were linked to higher depressive
symptoms, and rates were even higher in youths
meeting criteria for the mixed specier proposed for
DSM-5. Both suicide ideation and attempts were
associated with lower youth QoL and poorer family
functioning. Parent effects (with suicidality treated
as outcome) and child effects (where suicide was the
predictor of poor family functioning) showed equally
strong evidence in regression models, even after
adjusting for demographics.
Etain et al.
(2013)
Journal of Clinical
Psychiatry
587 patients with DSM-IV-dened bipolar disorder were recruited
from France and Norway between 1996-2008 and 2007-2012,
respectively.
Multivariate analyses investigating trauma variables
together showed that both emotional and sexual
abuse were independent predictors of lower age at
onset (P0.002 for each) and history of suicide
attempts (OR1.60 [95% CI, 1.07 to 2.39], P0.023;
OR1.80 [95% CI, 1.142.86], P0.012, respectively),
while sexual abuse was the strongest predictor of
rapid cycling (OR2.04 [95% CI, 1.213.42],
P0.007). Females reported overall higher childhood
trauma frequency and greater associations to clinical
expressions than males (P valueso0.05).
Cassidy (2011) Suicide and Life-
Threatening Behavior
The study cohort included 87 males and 70 females. Ninety-six
were White and sixty-one were Black.
Gender, nicotine use, medical comorbidity, and
history of alcohol and other drug abuse were not,
although a trend was noted for a history of
benzodiazepine abuse.
Blair-West
et al. (1999)
Journal of Psychiatric
Research
Data was collected from the Systematic Treatment Enhancement
Program for Bipolar Disorder (STEP-BD) study. 3083 bipolar
patients were included in this report, among these 140 (4.6%) had a
suicide event (8 died by suicide and 132 attempted suicide).
The strongest predictor of a suicide event was a
history of suicide attempt (hazard ratio2.60, p-
valueo0.001) in line with prior literature. Additional
predictors were: younger age, a high total score on
the personality disorder questionnaire and a high
percentage of days spent depressed in the year prior
to study entry.
Gould et al.
(1996)
Yonsei Med J. A total of 579 medical records were retrospectively reviewed. The prevalence of suicide attempt was 13.1% in our
patient group. The presence of a depressive rst
episode was signicantly different between
attempters and nonattempters. Logistic regression
analysis revealed that depressive rst episodes and
bipolar II disorder were signicantly associated with
suicide attempts in those patients.
Arat et al.
(1988)
Acta Psychiatrica
Scandinavica
We tested factors for association with predominantly (Z2:1)
depressive vs. mania-like episodes with 928 DSM-IV type-I BPD
subjects from ve international sites.
Factors preliminarily associated with predominant-
depression included: electroconvulsive treatment,
longer latency-to-BPD diagnosis, rst episode
depressive or mixed, more suicide attempts, more
Axis-II comorbidity, ever having mixed-states, ever
L.d.S. Costa et al. / Journal of Affective Disorders 170 (2015) 237254 241
Table 1 (continued )
Authors Journal Sample Main ndings
married, and female sex. Predominant-mania was
associated with: initial manic or psychotic episodes,
more drug abuse, more education, and more family
psychiatric history. Of the 47.3% of subjects without
polarity-predominance, risks for all factors
considered were intermediate. Expanding the
denition of polarity-predominance to Z51% added
little, but shifting mixed-states to 'predominant-
depression' increased risk of suicidal acts from 2.4-
to 4.5-fold excess over predominant-mania-
hypomania, and suicidal risk was associated
continuously with increasing proportions of
depressive or mixed episodes.
Akiskal et al.
(1995)
Bipolar Disorders European Mania in Bipolar Longitudinal Evaluation of Medication
(EMBLEM) is a two-year, prospective, observational study that
enrolled 3,684 adult patients with bipolar disorder and initiated or
changed oral treatment for an acute manic/mixed episode.
Of the 2,219 patients who provided data on their
lifetime history of suicide attempts, 663 (29.9%) had
a history of suicidal behavior (at least one attempt).
Baseline factors associated with a history of suicidal
behavior included female gender, a history of alcohol
abuse, a history of substance abuse, young age at rst
treatment for a mood episode, longer disease
duration, greater depressive symptom severity
(HAMD-5 total score), current benzodiazepine use,
higher overall symptom severity (CGI-BP: mania and
overall score), and poor compliance.
McIntyre et al.
(2008)
Bipolar disorders We studied 737 families of probands with MAD with 4919 rst-
degree relatives (818 affected, 3948 unaffected, and 153 subjects
with no information available).
The estimated lifetime prevalence of suicidal
behavior (attempted and completed suicides) in 737
probands was 38.473.0%. Lithium treatment
decreased suicide risk in probands (p0.007). In
rst-degree relatives, a family history of suicidal
behavior contributed signicantly to the joint risk of
MAD and suicidal behavior (p0.0006).
Vaccari et al.,
(1978)
Journal of Affective
Disorders
We used family-based association testing in a cohort of 130
multiplex bipolar pedigrees, comprising 795 individuals, to look for
associations between suicidal behavior and 32 single nucleotide
polymorphisms (SNPs) from across the genes brain-derived
neurotrophic factor (BDNF), cholecystokinin (CCK) and the
cholecystokinin beta-receptor (CCKBR).
We found associations (pr0.05) between suicide
attempt and 12 SNPs of CCKBR and ve SNPs of
BDNF. After correction for multiple testing, seven
SNPs of CCKBR remained signicantly associated. No
association was found between CCK and suicidal
behavior.
WHO (2011) Journal of Affective
Disorders
We evaluated 198 bipolar patients and 103 health controls, using a
structured interview according to DSM-IV criteria.
We found that 26.77% and 16.67% had a lifetime
history of non violent suicide attempt and violent
suicide attempt, respectively. The clinical factors
associated with violent and non violent suicide
attempt had several differences. Violent suicide
attempters had an earlier illness onset and had a
higher number of psychiatric comorbidities
(borderline personality disorder, panic disorder and
alcoholism). The frequency of S allele carriers was
higher only in those patients who had made a violent
suicide attempt in their lifetime (x
2
16.969;
p0.0001). In a logistic regression model including
these factors, S allele carrier (5-HTTLPR) was the only
factor associated with violent suicide attempt.
Baldessarini
et al. (2006)
Journal of Affective
Disorders
TaqMan genotyping was used to detect FOXO3A SNPs in 273 BD
patients and 264 control subjects.
Three SNPs (rs1536057, rs2802292 and rs1935952)
were associated with BD, but none was positively
linked with suicidal behavior.
Dwivedi et al.
(2003)
European
Neuropsychopharmacology
Polymorphisms at the IMPA1 (rs915, rs1058401 and rs2268432)
and IMPA2 (rs66938, rs1020294, rs1250171 and rs630110), INPP1
(rs3791809, rs4853694 and 909270), GSK3 (rs3745233) and GSK3
(rs334558, rs1732170 and rs11921360) genes were genotyped.
Single SNP analyses showed that suicide attempters
had higher frequencies of AA genotype of the
rs669838-IMPA2 and GG genotype of the rs4853694-
INPP1gene compared to non-attempters. Results also
revealed that T-allele carriers of the rs1732170-
GSK3 gene and A-allele carriers of the rs11921360-
GSK3 gene had a higher risk for attempting suicide.
Haplotype analysis showed that attempters had
lower frequencies of A:A haplotype (rs4853694:
rs909270) at the INPP1 gene. Higher frequencies of
the C:A haplotype and lower frequencies of the A:C
haplotype at the GSK-3 gene (rs1732170:
rs11921360) were also found to be associated to SB in
BP. Therefore, our results suggest that genetic
variability at IMPA2, INPP1 and GSK3 genes is
associated with the emergence of SB in BP.
L.d.S. Costa et al. / Journal of Affective Disorders 170 (2015) 237254 242
Table 1 (continued )
Authors Journal Sample Main ndings
Polter et al.
(2009)
Front Psychiatry Here, we describe a family with four siblings, three affected females
and one unaffected male
Our results support a new model for psychiatric
disorders, in which multiple rare, damaging
mutations in genes functionally related to a common
signaling pathway contribute to the manifestation of
bipolar disorder.
Kerner et al.
(2013)
Compr Psychiatry. This study is based on the US Multiple Cause of Death public-use
data les for 1999 to 2006. Secondary data analysis was conducted
comparing decedents with unipolar/bipolar disorders and
decedents with all other causes of death, based on the death
records of 19,052,468 decedents in the Multiple Cause of Death
data les who died at 15 years and older
Prevalence of comorbid SUDs was higher among
unipolar and bipolar disorder deaths than that
among all other deaths. Among unipolar and bipolar
disorder deaths, comorbid SUDs were associated
with elevated risks for suicide and other unnatural
death in both men and women (prevalence ratios
ranging 1.499.46, Po0.05). They also were
associated with reductions in mean ages at death
(ranging 11.733.8 years, Po0.05). In general, these
effects were much stronger for drug use disorders
than for alcohol use disorders. Both SUDs had
stronger effects on suicide among women, whereas
their effects on other unnatural deaths were stronger
among men.
Nilsson et al.,
(2002)
American Journal of
Psychiatry
Analyses included 199 participants with bipolar disorder for whom
1077 time intervals were classied as either exposed to an
antiepileptic (carbamazepine, lamotrigine, or valproate) or not
exposed to an antiepileptic, an antidepressant, or lithium during
30 years of follow-up.
Participants who had more severe manic symptoms
were more likely to receive antiepileptic drugs.
Mixed-effects grouped-time survival models
revealed no elevation in risk of suicide attempt or
suicide during periods when participants were
receiving antiepileptics relative to periods when they
were not (hazard ratio0.93, 95% CI 0.451.92),
controlling for demographic and clinical variables
through propensity score matching.
Ratcliffe et al.,
(2008)
Mental Health and
Substance Use: Dual
Diagnosis
The sample consisted of 837 outpatients from Madrid, Spain. We
compared 528 subjects with a lifetime diagnosis of alcohol abuse or
dependence and 182 with other substance use disorders (SUDs) not
involving alcohol.
It was considered that 76.1% of the alcohol addicts
had a current dual diagnosis, the most prevalent
being mood and anxiety disorders. Fifty-two percent
had a personality disorder and most of them (81.6%)
had other SUDs. There was a greater prevalence of
dual pathology in the alcohol addict subgroup than
in the subgroup without problems of alcohol abuse
or dependence. Alcohol addicts were associated with
diagnoses of several types of personality disorder
and bipolar disorder and presented a greater suicide
risk than the subgroup of other SUDs.
Tsai et al.
(2002)
Psychological Medicine During the study period 1489 individuals with BD died by suicide,
an average of 116 cases/year.
Compared to other primary diagnosis suicides, those
with BD were more likely to be female, more than
5 years post-diagnosis, current/recent in-patients, to
have more than ve in-patient admissions, and to
have depressive symptoms. In BD suicides the most
common co-morbid diagnoses were personality
disorder and alcohol dependence. Approximately
40% were not prescribed mood stabilizers at the time
of death. More than 60% of BD suicides were in
contact with services the week prior to suicide but
were assessed as low risk.
Clements et al.
(2013)
General Hospital
Psychiatry
The aim of the study was to look for suicide risk factors among
sociodemographic and clinical factors, family history and stressful
life events in patients with diagnosis of unipolar and bipolar
affective disorder (597 patients, 563 controls).
In the bipolar and unipolar affective disorders
sample, we observed an association between suicidal
attempts and the following: family history of
psychiatric disorders, affective disorders and
psychoactive substance abuse/dependence;
inappropriate guilt in depression; chronic insomnia
and early onset of unipolar disorder. The risk of
suicide attempt differs in separate age brackets (it is
greater in patients under 45 years old). No difference
in family history of suicide and suicide attempts;
marital status; offspring; living with family;
psychotic symptoms and irritability; and coexistence
of personality disorder, anxiety disorder or substance
abuse/dependence with affective disorder was
observed in the groups of patients with and without
suicide attempt in lifetime history.
Pawlak et al.
(2013)
Bipolar Disorders A total of 206 consecutive patients (mean age 42715years; 54.9%
women) with DSM-IV diagnosed BD-I (n140) and BD-II (n66)
acutely admitted to a single psychiatric hospital department from
November 2002 through June 2009 were included.
Ninety-three patients (45.1%) had a history of one or
more serious suicide attempts. These constituted 60
(42.9%) of the BD-I patients and 33 (50%) of the BD-II
patients (no signicant difference). Lifetime suicide
attempt was associated with a higher number of
hospitalizations due to depression (po0.0001),
L.d.S. Costa et al. / Journal of Affective Disorders 170 (2015) 237254 243
Table 1 (continued )
Authors Journal Sample Main ndings
antidepressant (AD)-induced hypomania/mania
(p0.033), AD- and/or alcohol-induced affective
episodes (p0.009), alcohol and/or substance use
(p0.002), and a family history of alcohol abuse and/
or affective disorder (p0.01). Suicide attempt was
negatively associated with a higher Positive and
Negative Syndrome Scale for Schizophrenia (PANSS)
Positive Subscale score (p0.022) and more
hospitalizations due to mania (p0.006).
Sublette et al.
(2009)
Journal of Clinical
Psychiatry
1,643 individuals with a DSM-IV lifetime diagnosis of bipolar
disorder were identied from 43,093 general-population
respondents who were interviewed in the 2001-2002 National
Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions.
More than half of the respondents (54%) who met
criteria for bipolar disorder also reported alcohol use
disorder. Bipolar individuals with comorbid alcohol
use disorder were at greater risk for suicide attempt
than those individuals without alcohol use disorder
(adjusted odds ratio2.25; 95% CI, 1.613.14) and
were more likely to have comorbid nicotine
dependence and drug use disorders.
Lopez et al.,
(2001)
Comprehensive Psychiatry Using data collected from the National Comorbidity Survey
Replication study, we identied 158 individuals with childhood-
onset (o13 years) or adolescent-onset (13-18 years) primary
bipolar disorder (I, II or subthreshold).
Compared to adolescent-onset, people with
childhood-onset bipolar disorder had increased
likelihoods of attention decit hyperactivity disorder
(ADHD) (adjusted odds ratio2.81) and suicide
attempt (aOR3.61). Males were more likely than
females to develop SUD, and did so at a faster rate.
Hazard ratios of risk factors for SUD were: lifetime
oppositional deant disorder (2.048), any lifetime
anxiety disorder (3.077), adolescent-onset bipolar
disorder (1.653), and suicide attempt (15.424). SUD
was not predicted by bipolar disorder type, family
history of bipolar disorder, hospitalization for a mood
episode, ADHD or conduct disorder.
Oquendo et al.
(2010)
Journal of Clinical
Psychiatry
Participants included 67 adult inpatients and outpatients aged
18-60 years meeting DSM-IV criteria for bipolar disorder (bipolar I
and II disorders, bipolar disorder not otherwise specied).
We found that nonattempters reported signicantly
higher trait impulsivity scores on the Barratt
Impulsiveness Scale compared to attempters (t
57
2.2, P0.03) and that, among attempters, lower
trait impulsivity score was associated with higher
scores of lethality of prior attempts (r
25
0.53,
P0.01). Analyses revealed no other group
differences on demographic, clinical, or
neurocognitive variables when comparing
attempters versus nonattempters. Regression models
failed to identify any signicant predictors of past
suicide attempt.
Pfennig et al.,
(2005)
Journal of Affective
Disorders
Salivary cortisol was collected for three consecutive days in 29
controls, 80 bipolar individuals without a history of suicide and
56 bipolar individuals with a past history of suicide. Clinical factors
that affect salivary cortisol were also examined.
A past history of suicide was associated with a 7.4%
higher bedtime salivary cortisol level in bipolar
individuals. There was no statistical difference
between non-suicidal bipolar individuals and
controls in bedtime salivary cortisol and awakening
salivary cortisol was not different between the three
groups.
Yerevanian
et al., (2004)
PLoS ONE We studied 27 bipolar subjects using the NEO-PI We found positive associations between personality
factors and ratios of n-3 PUFA, suggesting that
conversion of short chain to long chain n-3s and the
activity of enzymes in this pathway may associate
with measures of personality. Thus, ratios of
docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) to alpha linolenic acid
(ALA) and the activity of fatty acid desaturase 2
(FADS2) involved in the conversion of ALA to DHA
were positively associated with openness factor
scores. Ratios of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) to ALA
and ratios of EPA to DHA were positively associated
with agreeableness factor scores. Finally, serum
concentrations of the n-6, arachidonic acid (AA),
were signicantly lower in subjects with a history of
suicide attempt compared to non-attempters.
Evans et al.
(2012)
Acta Neuropsychiatrica Two hundred fty-ve DSM-IV out-patients with bipolar disorder
were consecutively recruited from the Bipolar Disorder Program at
Hospital das Clnicas de Porto Alegre and the University Hospital at
the Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, Brazil.
Over 30% of the sample was obese and over 50% had
a history of suicide attempt. In the multivariate
model, obese patients were nearly twice (OR1.97,
95% CI: 1.063.69, p0.03) as likely to have a history
of suicide attempt(s).
Azorin et al.
(2009)
Iranian Journal of
Psychiatry and Behavioral
Sciences
One hundred patients were followed for 242 months (mean:
20.6712.5 months).
Only one patient attempted suicide during the
follow-up period. 33% of the patients had history of
previous suicide attempts. Female gender, divorce,
L.d.S. Costa et al. / Journal of Affective Disorders 170 (2015) 237254 244
Table 1 (continued )
Authors Journal Sample Main ndings
and early age at onset of the disease were
independently correlated with suicide attempt.
Undurraga
et al. (2011)
Comprehensive Psychiatry Participants were 216 consecutive inpatients (97 men and 119
women) with a Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders, Fourth Edition, Text Revision (DSM-IV-TR), BD who were
admitted to the Sant'Andrea Hospital's psychiatric ward in Rome
(Italy).
Patients with BD-II had higher scores on the BHS
(9.7875.37 vs. 6.8774.69; t
143.59
3.94; P
o0.001) than patients with BD-I. Hopelessness was
associated with the individual pattern of
temperament traits (i.e., the relative balance of
hyperthymic vs. cyclothymic-irritable-anxious-
dysthmic). Furthermore, patients with higher
hopelessness (compared with those with lower
levels of hopelessness) reported more frequently
moderate to severe depression (87.1% vs. 38.9%;
Po0.001) and higher MINI suicidal risk.
Shabani et al.
(2013)
Comprehensive Psychiatry A sample of 102 outpatients with a diagnosis of bipolar disorder
according to International Classication of Diseases, 10th Revision
criteria during nonsyndromal stage were evaluated.
As compared with the nonsuicidal group, female sex,
combined psychopharmacologic treatment, and
hopelessness were independently associated with
suicide attempt. Hopelessness and insight into
having a mental disorder were independently
associated with history of suicidal ideation.
Akiskal (2007) Journal of Nervous and
Mental Disease
Among 212 patients with bipolar disorder, 44 (21.2%) patients had
histories of suicide attempts.
The variables that differentiated those who did from
those who did not attempt suicide included age at
rst contact, lifetime history of antidepressant use,
major depressive episode, mixed episode, auditory
hallucinations, rapid cycling, the number of previous
mood episodes, age of rst depressive episode, and
age of rst psychotic symptoms.
Weinstock and
Miller (2008)
Neuropsychiatric Disease
and Treatment
The data of 383 bipolar I disorder patients were included in the
analyses.
The demographic/clinical variables signicantly
associated with the MINI suicide risk scores included
age, number of overall previous episodes, the Young
Mania Rating Scale score, the Montgomery Asberg
Depression Rating Scale scores, and the Clinical
Global Impression Severity of Illness Scale for Bipolar
Disorder mania score, depression score, and overall
score. The variables affecting the differences of
suicide risk scores between or among groups were
type of rst mood episode, a history of rapid cycling,
anxiety disorders, and alcohol use disorders.
Pompili et al.
(2012)
Psicologia: Reexao e
Critica
The Iowa Gambling Task and the Conner's Continuous Performance
Test evaluated impulsivity in 95 euthymic bipolar patients -42
suicide attempters and 115 normal control participants.
A factorial analysis evaluated the adequacy of the
instruments. Furthermore, a multiple regression
analysis was done in order to develop a model to
predict suicide attempts. Our results point to a
specic type of impulsivity related to making
decisions, lack of planning and borderline
personality disorder comorbidity. This type of
impulsivity is a risk factor for suicide attempts in
patients with bipolar disorder.
American
Psychiatric
Association
(2003)
Journal of Affective
Disorders
As part of the EPIDEP National Multisite French Study of 493
consecutive DSM-IV major depressive patients evaluated in at least
two semi-structured interviews 1 month apart, 234 (55.2%) could
be classied as with high religious involvement (HRl), and 190
(44.8%) as with low religious involvement (LRl), on the basis of
their ratings on the Duke Religious lndex (DRl).
Compared to LRl, HRl patients did not differ with
respect to their religious afliation but had a later
age at onset of their affective illness with more
hospitalizations, suicide attempts, associated
hypomanic features, switches under antidepressant
treatment, prescription of tricyclics, comorbid
obsessive compulsive disorder, and family history of
affective disorder in rst-degree relatives.
World Health
Organization
(WHO)
(2003)
Journal of Clinical
Psychiatry
A retrospective case control study of 149 depressed bipolar patients
(DSM-III-R criteria) in a tertiary care university research clinic was
conducted. Patients who reported religious afliation were
compared with 51 patients without religious afliation in terms of
sociodemographic and clinical characteristics and history of
suicidal behavior.
Religiously afliated patients had more children and
more family-oriented social networks than
nonafliated patients. As for clinical variables,
religiously afliated patients had fewer past suicide
attempts, had fewer suicides in rst-degree relatives,
and were older at the time of rst suicide attempt
than unafliated patients. Furthermore, patients
with religious afliation had comparatively higher
scores on the moral or religious objections to suicide
subscale of the RFLI, lower lifetime aggression, and
less comorbid alcohol and substance abuse and
childhood abuse experience. After controlling for
confounders, higher aggression scores (P0.001)
and lower score on the moral or religious objections
L.d.S. Costa et al. / Journal of Affective Disorders 170 (2015) 237254 245
to overall mortality rates (Angst et al., 2002; Roshanaei-Moghaddam
and Katon, 2009).
The risk of suicide for individuals with BD is approximately 60
times greater than that of the general population (Simon et al.,
2007). Fifteen to twenty percent of individuals with BD complete
suicide and up to 40% report at least one suicide attempt during
their lifetime (Simon et al., 2007).
The ratio of suicide attempts to completed suicides for the
general population is 35:1, but for individuals with BD, the same
ratio is 3:1 (Simon et al., 2007). In fact, it is estimated that BD may
account for one-quarter of all completed suicides (American
Psychiatric Association, 2013; Huber et al., 2014).
However, unlike other authors included in this review,
Undurraga et al., (2012) concluded that suicidal risk-factors found
to be independent of bipolar disorder. This fact, as well as the
different conclusions reached by the authors, which will be
demonstrated below, exposes the need for further research.
4.1. Risk factors associated with sociodemographic components
Quality of life seems to be associated with suicidal behaviors
(i.e., suicidal ideation, suicide attempts, and complete suicide) in
the general population and in psychiatric patients (De Abreu et al.,
2012).
A recent review showed that Quality of Life (QoL) is markedly
impaired in patients with BD, even when they are clinically
euthymic (De Abreu et al., 2012; Michalak et al., 2005). Also,
stressful life event(s) was another preponderant factor predicting
suicide attempts, and has played an important role in predicting
suicide attempts among BD patients in many studies, particularly
during depressive phases (Azorin et al., 2009; Ruengorn et al.,
2012).
De Abreu et al. (2012) hypothesized that patients with BD and
previous suicide attempts would have worse QoL than patients
with BD but no previous suicide attempts . It is possible that low
QoL may reect the existence of poor coping skills and inadequate
social support, which in turn may increase the risk for suicide
attempts (De Abreu et al., 2012). Further prospective studies are
needed to clarify the causal and temporal relationships between
low QoL and suicide attempts (De Abreu et al., 2012).
Pediatric Bipolar Disorder (PBD), for example, is associated
with substantially lower average QoL than found with many other
major medical illnesses, and worse than other mental illnesses in
youth except for major depression (Freeman et al., 2009; Algorta
et al., 2011). Suicidality and lower youth QoL both were signi-
cantly associated with worse family functioning (Algorta et al.,
2011). Poor family functioning, poor youth QoL, and mixed
features will each make unique contributions to suicidality as an
outcome variable (Algorta et al., 2011). Also, Etain et al. (2013)
demonstrated consistent associations between childhood trauma
and more severe clinical characteristics in bipolar disorder .
Moreover, family history of completed suicide had the highest
odds ratio of signicant ndings. In previous reports in bipolar
cohorts (Galfavy et al., 2006; Valtonen et al., 2006), family history
of suicide was no different between bipolar patients with and
without histories of attempts, although one study reported family
history was predictive of earlier attempts (Galfavy et al., 2006;
Cassidy, 2011). Also, the higher frequency of bipolar disorder
family history in agitated depression suggests that a bipolar
vulnerability may be required to obtain such clustering of hypo-
manic symptoms (Akiskal et al., 2005). Overall, ndings support an
association between family functioning and suicidality within
families where youths have bipolar disorder (Miklowitz and
Chang, 2008). Results suggest that it is plausible that the youth's
illness may play an active role in disrupting family processes.
Bipolar disorder may involve a potent combination of mood
dysregulation and interpersonal processes where threats of harm
against oneself or another may occur both impulsively and/or
instrumentally (Algorta et al., 2011). In fact, bipolar disorder
imparts the greatest risk for completed suicide among youth
(Goldstein et al., 2012).
With regard to age groups at risk for suicidal behavior, prior
literature suggests that young-aged patients are at higher risk of
suicide compared to older patients, in line with the nding of this
report. Studies with depressed patients have shown that young
patients report a higher number of suicide attempts (Blair-West
et al., 1999; Antypa et al., 2013; Azorin et al., 2010). Although no
association was found between age and suicide attempts (Azorin
et al., 2009). Studies of adolescent suicide completers document
the substantial contribution of parental depression to offspring
suicide risk (Gould et al., 1996), even after accounting for the
child's depressive severity (Brent et al., 1993). It is possible that
familial depression contributes to offspring suicide risk via multi-
ple avenues, including decreased familial support and increased
conict (Goldstein et al., 2012; Brent et al., 1994).
Ryu et al. (2010) investigated the descriptive characteristics of
suicide attempts and the risk factors for suicide attempts in Korean
bipolar patients by assessing sociodemographic factors, clinical
factors, and the methods of suicide attempts using retrospective
reviews of medical records . Ryu et al. (2010) reviewed medical
records of all 601 patients who were admitted to the psychiatric
wards in one mental hospital and three general hospitals (Ryu
et al., 2010). The 579 subjects who were included in the nal
analysis was comprised of 262 (45.3%) men and 317 (54.7%)
women (Ryu et al., 2010).
Ryu et al. (2010) found two signicant risk factors associated.
First, they found that patients with depressive rst episodes
appear to be higher in suicide attempters. Bipolar patients with
Table 1 (continued )
Authors Journal Sample Main ndings
to suicide subscale of the RFLI (Po0.001) were
signicantly associated with suicidal behavior in
depressed bipolar patients. Moral or religious
objections to suicide mediated the effects of religious
afliation on suicidal behavior in this sample.
Suttajit et al.
(2013)
General Hospital
Psychiatry
The aim of the study was looking for suicide risk factors among
personality dimensions and value system in patients with diagnosis
of unipolar and bipolar affective disorder (n189 patients, n101
controls).
The main limitations of the study are number of
participants, lack of data about stressful life events
and treatment with lithium. Novelty seeking and
harm avoidance dimensions constituted suicide
attempt risk factors in the group of patients with
affective disorders. Protective role of cooperativeness
was discovered. Patients with and without suicide
attempt in lifetime history varied in self-esteem
position in Value Survey.
L.d.S. Costa et al. / Journal of Affective Disorders 170 (2015) 237254 246
a depressive episode at their initial admission or rst episode tend
to have a depressed mood at the next episode (Daban et al., 2006;
Perugi et al., 2000). Moreover, 60% of suicide attempters with
depressive episodes commit suicide at the rst mood episode
(Balzs et al., 2003). Prolonged exposure to depressive episodes
might increase the risk of suicide attempts in bipolar patients and
poor prognostic factor in suicide related behavior (Valtonen et al.,
2006; Ryu et al., 2010). Second it was observed that bipolar II
patients have a higher risk for suicide attempts. Bipolar II patients
are known to have greater risk of suicide than bipolar I patients
(Balzs et al., 2003; Arat et al., 1988). Bipolar II patients show a
predominantly depressive mood, mood lability, and mixed nature
(Akiskal et al., 1995; Benazzi 2007). Bipolar II patients are likely to
have depressive or mixed episodes at hospital admission rather
than bipolar I patients (Ryu et al., 2010). Also, there is a stronger
continuous relationship of suicidal risk with the proportion of total
recurrences that were depressive-or-mixed vs. depressive
(Baldessarini et al., 2012). Baldessarini et al. (2012) has shown a
strong association of predominant depression, especially with
mixed-episodes included, with suicidal behavior.
Furthermore, suicide attempts were observed in both males and
females at similar rates. Moreover, females who attempted suicide
were as likely to have attempted suicide by a more violent method as
males (Cassidy, 2011). Although, it was observed that some authors
categorized the female gender as a risk factor (Bellivier et al., 2011).
Parmentier et al. (2012) observed that reported rates of suicide
attempts among women with bipolar disorders are about twice as
high as among men with bipolar disorders, suggesting greater
lethality of suicide attempts in men (Parmentier et al., 2012;
Suicidology AAo, 2000; Tondo et al., 2006).
Ruengorn et al. (2012) proposed a risk-scoring scheme for
suicide attempts in Thai patients with BD. Ruengorn et al. (2012)
conducted a study at Suanprung Psychiatric Hospital, a total of 489
patients' medical les were reviewed and included in the nal
analysis. Results revealed that suicide attempters were younger,
single, did not have children, and had little or very little social
support. They reported experiencing more stressful life events,
reported being depressed, had suffered from BD at an early age,
had a family history of suicide, had previously attempted suicide,
had previous suicidal ideation, alcohol use, and were prescribed
antipsychotics, antidepressants, anxiolytics, and mood stabilizers
(Ruengorn et al., 2012). Using multivariate logistic regression, the
author found six indicators of suicide attempts: depressive epi-
sodes, previous suicide attempt(s), stressful life event(s), inter-
mittent or poor medication adherence, and shorter duration of BD
treatment. Psychotic symptom(s) provided an inverse association
with suicide risk (Ruengorn et al., 2012).
Moreover, the altitude was seen as a signicant risk factor
(Huber et al., 2014). Several biological theories may explain an
altitude-suicide association. Dopamine and serotonin are neuro-
transmitters associated with pleasure, reward, and mood.
Decreased levels of serotonin and increased levels of dopamine
and norepinephrine associated with hypoxia at higher altitudes
may lead to increased irritability, depression, and suicide (Huber
et al., 2014; Trouvin et al., 1986; Jou et al., 2009).
Converging lines of evidence also indicate that mitochondrial
dysfunction plays a role in the pathophysiology of BD and may
inuence the severity of episodes (Scaglia, 2010; Quiroz et al.,
2008; Kato, 2006). Studies of patients with mitochondrial disease
show that both adults (Fattal et al., 2006, 2007) and children
(Morava et al., 2010; Koene et al., 2009) have elevated rates of
depressive symptoms. Metabolic stress due to hypoxia may have
important considerations for individuals with BD. Hypoxia due to
reduced oxygen partial pressure at higher altitudes may further
decrease mitochondrial function in individuals with BD (McIntyre
et al., 2008; Rezin et al., 2009). For these individuals, metabolic
changes associated with hypoxia may lead to depression, instabil-
ity of mood, and increased risk of suicide (Huber et al., 2014;
Vaccari et al., 1978).
4.2. Risk factors associated with genetic components
Suicide attempt was dened as an intentional self-inicted
injury with self-destructive intent (Manchia et al., 2013). Globally,
approximately one million individuals commit suicide each year
(WHO, 2011; Sears et al., 2013). Suicidal behavior is a matter of
major concern in the management of BD patients for many
reasons. First, their suicide rates are about 60 times higher than
that observed in general population. Second, about one third to
half of these patients will make at least one suicide attempt during
their disease. Finally, their suicide acts have a higher lethality as
suggested by a much lower ratio of attempted suicide (approxi-
mately 3:1) than in the general population (approximately 30:1)
(Baldessarini et al., 2006; Neves et al., 2010).
Although many data have suggested that BD confers a higher
risk of suicide than other psychiatric illnesses (Sajatovic, 2005),
few studies have yet been conducted to investigate the contribu-
tion of the genetic component (Magno et al., 2011).
Genetic variation plays an important role in BD and suicide
susceptibility. However, little is known about the genetic inuence
on the risk of suicide, particularly in BD patients (Magno et al.,
2011). The liability to suicidal behavior is inuenced by genetic
factors (particularly family history of suicidal behavior and Major
Affective Disorders) (Manchia et al., 2013).
In addition, genetic determinants such as polymorphisms
within the tryptophan hydroxylase 1 (TPH1; Gene ID 7166 in
11p15.3p14) and the tryptophan hydroxylase 2 (TPH2; Gene ID
121278 in 12q21.1) genes were found to be associated with suicide
attempts of high lethality and with completed suicides, respec-
tively (Manchia et al., 2013; Galfalvy et al., 2009; Lopez et al.,
2007). These ndings are of interest considering the association
between altered serotonin system function in the brain and
suicide (Manchia et al., 2013). Neves et al. (2010) showed that
serotonin polymorphism (5-HTTLPR; Gene ID 6532 in 17q11.2) is
strongly associated with violent suicidal behavior in BD patients.
Their results could be an important step to create a genetic tool for
long-term suicide prediction (Neves et al., 2010). Biological mar-
kers, such as 5-HTTLPR (Gene ID 6532 in 17q11.2), could help for
identication of potential suicide attempters (Neves et al., 2010).
Several lines of evidence indicate that brain-derived neuro-
trophic factor (BDNF; Gene ID 627 in 11p13) is a good candidate
gene for involvement in suicidal behavior. Post-mortem studies
have shown that the expression of BDNF (Gene ID 627 in 11p13) is
signicantly reduced in individuals that have committed suicide,
regardless of psychiatric diagnosis (Sears et al., 2013; Dwivedi
et al., 2003; Karege et al., 2005). Moreover, an association between
BDNF (Gene ID 627 in 11p13) gene and violent Suicide Attempt (SA)
has been also detected in a sample of this patients (Neves et al.,
2011; Jimnez et al., 2013). In addition, brain-derived neurotrophic
factor (BDNF; Gene ID 627 in 11p13) and lithium, well known
therapeutic drug in mood disorder (Fountoulakis et al., 2008),
reduces FoxO3a (Gene ID 2309 in 6q21) transcriptional activity
(Magno et al., 2011; Mao et al., 2007; Zhu et al., 2004). FoxO3a
(Gene ID 2309 in 6q21) inuences distinct behavioral processes
linked to anxiety and depression. Recently, a study using a
knockout (KO) mice model suggested that FoxO3a (Gene ID 2309
in 6q21) may be a transcriptional target for anxiety and mood
disorder treatment (Magno et al., 2011; Polter et al., 2009). These
data suggest that FOXO3A (Gene ID 2309 in 6q21) is a novel
susceptibility locus for BD, but not for suicidal behavior in BD
patients. These results may contribute to a better understanding of
the BD genetics (Magno et al., 2011).
L.d.S. Costa et al. / Journal of Affective Disorders 170 (2015) 237254 247
Some evidence links phosphosinositol pathway to suicidal
behavior (Jimnez et al., 2013). Jimnez et al. (2013) suggest that
genetic variability at rs669838-IMPA2 (Gene ID 3613 in 18p11.2),
rs4853694-INPP1 (Gene ID 3628 in 2q32), rs1732170- GSK3b
(Gene ID 2932 in 3q13.3) and rs11921360-GSK3b (Gene ID 2932
in 3q13.3) genes is associated with a higher risk of attempting
suicide in bipolar patients (Jimnez et al., 2013). It is known that at
therapeutic concentrations, lithium immediately inhibits several
enzymes, such as both isoenzymes (1 and 2) of inositolmonopho-
sphatase (IMPA), inositolpolyphosphate-1 phosphatase (INPP1),
phosphoglucomutase and glycogen synthasekinase-3b (GSK3b)
(Jimnez et al., 2013; Quiroz et al., 2004; Serretti et al., 2009).
The phosphoinositol pathway is associated with cellular activities
such as metabolism, secretion, phototransduction, cell growth and
differentiation (Jimnez et al., 2013; Serretti et al., 2009).
The question remains how genetic risk factors contribute to the
manifestation of bipolar disorder. If we could answer this question,
early intervention and effective treatment could become a reality
(Kerner et al., 2013). Heritable factors have important effect on
susceptibility to suicidal behavior, which is supported by several
studies showing that genetic polymorphisms play a role in suicide
risk (Magno et al., 2011; Galfalvy et al., 2009; Magno et al., 2010;
Roy and Segal, 2001). Strong heritability of bipolar disorder has
been supported by many studies, but the identication of causal
variants has been challenging (Kerner et al., 2013).
4.3. Risk factors associated with medicines and drugs in general that
interfere with bipolar disorder
Prevalence of comorbid substance use disorders was higher
among unipolar and bipolar disorder deaths than that among all
other deaths. Among unipolar and bipolar disorder deaths, comor-
bid substance use disorders were associated with elevated risks for
suicide and other unnatural death in both males and females
(Yoon et al., 2011). Antiepileptic drugs are approved for the
treatment of epilepsy, bipolar disorder, and neuropathic pain. Each
of these conditions is associated with an elevated risk of suicide
(Simon et al., 2007; Christensen et al., 2007; Nilsson et al., 2002;
Ratcliffe et al., 2008; Tsai et al., 2002; Leon et al., 2012). Alcohol
addicts were associated with diagnoses of several types of person-
ality disorder and bipolar disorder and presented a greater suicide
risk than the subgroup of other substance use disorders (SUDs)
(Arias et al., 2013). Personality disorder and alcohol dependence
were the most common secondary diagnoses in the BD group
(Clements et al., 2013). Twenty-ve percent of persons consume
alcohol prior to suicidal attempt (Raja and Azzoni, 2004). Leverich
et al. (2003) also point to family history of abuse of medicinal
drugs as a suicide risk factor (Leverich et al., 2003; Pawlak et al.,
2013).
The risk of suicidal behavior or ideation was signicantly
elevated in patients who received an antiepileptic compared with
those who received placebo when no adjustments were made for
trial differences (Leon et al., 2012). This warning was based on an
U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) examination of data from
199 randomized clinical trials of 11 antiepileptic medications
(carbamazepine, divalproex, felbamate, gabapentin, lamotrigine,
levetiracetam, oxcarbazepine, pregabalin, tiagabine, topiramate,
and zonisamide) (Leon et al., 2012). The role of antidepressants
(AD) in suicide risk is important, and this has received much
attention in recent years (McElroy et al., 2006). There is an
association between the use of AD and a risk of acute manic
switch in BD (Ghaemi et al., 2003), and McElroy et al. (2006)
concluded that AD may induce suicidal intention by manic con-
version in a subset of depressive presentations (Finseth et al.,
2012). In general, these effects were much stronger for Drug Use
Disorders (DUD) than for Alcohol Use Disorders (AUD). Both
substance use disorders had stronger effects on suicide among
females, whereas their effects on other unnatural deaths were
stronger among males (Yoon et al., 2011).
According to the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and
Related Conditions (NESARC) estimates, among individuals with
12-month unipolar depressive disorder, 14.1% had alcohol use
disorders (AUD) and 4.6% had drug use disorders (DUD). These
represented signicantly elevated risks for the comorbid sub-
stance use disorders (Yoon et al., 2011; Hasin et al., 2005). In a
sample consisted of 837 outpatients from Madrid, Spain. Arias
et al., (2013) compared 528 subjects with a lifetime diagnosis of
alcohol abuse or dependence and 182 with other substance use
disorders (SUDs) not involving alcohol. The Mini International
Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI) was used to evaluate Axis I
disorders and the Personality Disorder Questionnaire to evaluate
personality disorders. It was considered that 76.1% of the alcohol
addicts had a current dual diagnosis, the most prevalent being
mood and anxiety disorders. Fifty-two percent had a personality
disorder and most of them (81.6%) had other SUDs Compared to
people with bipolar disorder alone, those who have bipolar
disorder with comorbid SUD have an increased prevalence of
suicide attempts (Sublette et al., 2009; Dalton et al., 2003; Lopez
et al., 2001; Oquendo et al., 2010; Potash et al., 2000; Kenneson
et al., 2013).
Gilbert et al. (2011) identied the extremely difcult to predict
suicidal behavior, even when comprehensive clinical information
is available. However, empirical evidence has shown that people
with mood disorders and/or substance use disorders experience
excess mortality (Yoon et al., 2011; Amaddeo et al., 1995; Black
et al., 1985; Bruce et al., 1994; Cuijpers and Smit, 2002; Harris and
Barraclough, 1998; Hiroeh et al., 2001; Mykletun et al., 2007;
Wulsin et al., 1999). Actually, only a few studies have examined the
association between mood disorders and other causes of unnatural
death (Black et al., 1985; Hiroeh et al., 2001; Mykletun et al., 2007;
Gau and Cheng, 2004; Joukamaa et al., 2001; sby et al., 2001),
despite the fact that individuals with mood disorders, especially
those with bipolar disorder, are more likely to engage in fatal
accidents due to impaired attention and concentration (Stahl,
2000) or to be victims of homicide due to affective psychoses
(Yoon et al., 2011; Hiroeh et al., 2001). These ndings suggest that
abuse of alcohol or drugs could be considered as an important
characteristic to identify subgroups at risk for suicidal behavior
(Akiskal et al., 1995; Maremmani et al., 2007). Leverich et al.
(2003) have found a correlation between suicidal behaviors and
the family history of suicide attempts or committed suicides, as
well as the family history of abuse of medicinal drugs (Leverich
et al., 2003; Pawlak et al., 2013). Interventions to reduce suicide
risk in bipolar disorder need to address the common and high risk
comorbidity with alcohol use disorders (Oquendo et al., 2010).
4.4. Risk factors associated with biological components
Altered functioning of the Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal
(HPA) axis has been reported in suicidal behavior and in Bipolar
Disorder (BD) (Daban et al., 2005; Mann, 2003). However, many
studies of HPA axis function in bipolar disorder have not examined
the potential effects of Suicidal Behavior (SB) (Cassidy et al., 1998;
Cervantes et al., 2001; Cookson et al., 1985; Godwin, 1984;
Linkowski et al., 1994; Rybakowski and Twardowska, 1999;
Schmider et al., 1995) and studies of the association between
HPA axis activity and suicidal behavior in varied diagnostic groups
have had mixed results (Black et al., 2002; Coryell and Schlesser,
2001; Dahl et al., 1991; Duval et al., 2001; Jokinen and Nordstrm,
2008; Jokinen and Nordstrm, 2009; Jokinen et al., 2009; Lindqvist
et al., 2008; Pfennig et al., 2005; Pitchot et al., 2008; Tripodianakis
et al., 2000; Yerevanian et al., 2004; Kamali et al., 2012).
L.d.S. Costa et al. / Journal of Affective Disorders 170 (2015) 237254 248
The HPA axis has been examined using a number of methods.
Basal cortisol secretion has been measured with 24 h urinary
cortisol secretion and serum or salivary cortisol levels. The feed-
back and suppression mechanisms of the HPA axis have been
investigated with the dexamethasone suppression test (DST)
(Kamali et al., 2012) or the dexamethasone/corticotropin-releasing
hormone (DEX/CRH) challenge test (Carroll et al., 1981; Heuser
et al., 1994).
Kamali et al. (2012) examined HPA axis activity as a trait
marker for bipolar disorder and suicide by measuring salivar
cortisol in a bipolar cohort with a history of suicide and compares
it with non-suicidal bipolar individuals and unaffected controls.
Kamali et al., (2012) hypothesis was that those with bipolar
disorder would have elevated basal salivary cortisol compared to
unaffected controls, and that the suicidal bipolar individuals
(dened by a lifetime history of attempted suicide) would have
higher levels of salivary cortisol compared to those with no history
of suicidal behavior and unaffected controls.
A total of 185 individuals participated in the study and
provided at least one salivary cortisol sample. The majority (152
individuals) were enrolled in the Prechter Longitudinal Study. One
subject subsequently retracted their consent, the salivary samples
from one subject were missing at time of analysis, the saliva
volume from two individuals was insufcient for analysis and
three individuals did not complete enough of the diagnostic
interview to reach a diagnosis. Of the remaining 178, 118 (66.3%)
had a diagnosis of bipolar I, 14 (7.9%) had bipolar II with recurrent
depression, 7 (3.9%) had schizoaffective disorderbipolar type, 8
(4.5%) had other affective diagnosis (depressive disorder NOS,
MDD, Bipolar II with single depressive episode), 2 (1.1%) had only
non-affective diagnoses (alcohol abuse and dependence) and 29
(16.3%) were unaffected controls. For the purpose of this study,
those with bipolar I, bipolar II with recurrent depression and
schizoaffective disorder bipolar type were grouped together as the
bipolar group (N139) and were categorized based on reported
suicide history obtained during the Diagnostic Interview for
Genetic Studies (DIGS) (Kamali et al., 2012).
Kamali et al., (2012) found elevated bedtime salivary cortisol in
bipolar individuals with a history of suicide attempts compared to
nonsuicidal bipolar individuals. Secondary analysis of the intensity
of suicidal behavior and level of bedtime cortisol indicated a
positive correlation, with the highest cortisol levels reported in
individuals that had made a past serious suicide attempt. The
difference in bedtime salivary cortisol between suicidal and non-
suicidal bipolar individuals remained signicant even after con-
trolling for age and sex, body mass index (BMI), smoking status,
childhood sexual abuse, medications, mood state at time of
sampling and several clinical factors related to course and severity
of illness (substance use disorders, chronicity of illness, rapid
cycling, mixed states, years of illness, age of onset, anxiety and
psychosis). This is a strong indicator that their nding is related to
the presence of a past history of suicidality and not related to
severity of illness, mood state, or demographic confounders. The
presence of this nding during different mood states and also in
the euthymic state indicates that hyperactivity of the HPA axis is a
biological marker related to suicidality in bipolar disorder and
warrants more detailed investigation (Kamali et al., 2012).
The difference between bipolar participants with and without
suicidal behavior was only 0.05 g/dl. Currently, the test has low
sensitivity and specicity in detecting individuals with suicidal
history in practical clinical applications. However, the observation
of a sustained correlation between increasing suicidality and
cortisol levels while controlling for confounding clinical and
biological factors clearly indicates the relevance of HPA axis
abnormalities in this potentially lethal clinical condition (Kamali
et al., 2012).
Several potential risk factors have been linked to suicidal
behavior. Two of these include personality factors and Polyunsa-
turated fatty acids (PUFA) serum levels. It is unknown whether
PUFA serum levels are associated with personality factors and if
these may interact to affect suicidal behavior (Evans et al., 2012).
Supplementation with the long-chain n-3 (n-3) fatty acids, doc-
osahexaenoic acid (DHA) and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), either
as stand alone or adjunctive therapies have shown efcacy in the
treatment of bipolar disorder (Evans et al., 2012). Epidemiological
studies have pointed to an association between n-3 and n-6
dietary intake and lifetime prevalence of bipolar disorder. Popula-
tions that consume greater long-chain n-3 s and less long chain
n-6 s have a lower incidence of bipolar disease (Evans et al., 2012;
Hibbeln et al., 2006).
N-3 intake inversely associates with violent behavior and
suicidality, Evan et al. hypothesize that serum levels of the long
chain n-3 s, DHA and EPA, may positively associate with person-
ality factors that may be protective against suicide behavior and/or
negatively associate with personality factors that, themselves,
associate with increased risk of suicide behavior (Evans et al.,
2012). Several studies suggest that BD patients' previous suicide
attempt(s) may indicate that they are more than 50% more likely
to go on to complete suicide (Ruengorn et al., 2012; Tsai et al.,
2002; Isometsa et al., 1994).
Identifying metabolic or dietary factors that inuence factors
associated with psychiatric illness may provide a path to improv-
ing therapeutic tools. Evans et al. found associations between lipid
proles and suicidal history in bipolar subjects (Evans et al., 2012).
These data further support a link between essential fatty acid
metabolism and mood disorders. While the current pilot study is
an observational, cross-sectional study, it raises important ques-
tions regarding potential causative roles for lipid proles in
regulating personality phenotypes that may impact the treatment
of bipolar disorder. Nevertheless, the fact that personality factors,
promoted as trait markers in bipolar disorder are not entirely
stable (Barnett and Huang, 2010) and longer-term longitudinal
studies are necessary to examine the relationship between per-
sonality traits and fatty acid proles. Evans et al., (2012)
Of signicant interest is the co-occurrence of metabolic dis-
turbances in bipolar disorder, particularly obesity (Gomes et al.,
2010). Gomes, et al. nd adds to the notion that obesity is a
correlate of severity in patients with bipolar disorder. Obese
patients usually have more markers of illness severity, such as
more previous affective episodes (Fagiolini et al., 2002) and suicide
attempts (Fagiolini et al., 2004; Fagiolini et al., 2005; Wang et al.,
2006). Recent data have stressed common features in the under-
lying pathophysiology of obesity and bipolar disorder. Leptin, a key
hormone in regulation of adiposity has been shown to be posi-
tively associated with risk for depression in a prospective study
(Pasco et al., 2007). Disturbances in metabolic pathways such as
insulin-mediated glucose homeostasis, overactivation of the
hypothalamicpituitaryadrenal axis, dysregulated immune and
inammatory processes and adipocytokines proles are present in
both conditions (Gomes et al., 2010; McIntyre et al., 2007).
4.5. Risk factors associated with psychological causes
BD is a frequent and chronic psychiatric disorder associated with
an increase in all-cause mortality (sby et al., 2001; McIntyre and
Konarski, 2004; McIntyre et al., 2008). In particular, among mental
disorders, BD is one of the leading causes of suicidal behaviors and
this is a major issue in the management of the disease (Parmentier
et al., 2012). Mixed-states and well as depressions are strongly
associated with suicidal behavior in patients with BD (Algorta
et al., 2011; Baldessarini et al., 2012; Azorin et al., 2009; Pompili
et al., 2009; Baldessarini et al., 2010; Undurraga et al., 2011).
L.d.S. Costa et al. / Journal of Affective Disorders 170 (2015) 237254 249
Bipolar disorder is strongly associated with suicidal ideations,
attempts and commissions (Shabani et al., 2013). Cyclothymic
temperament may inuence suicide risk on multiple levels, from
determining emotional reactivity in stressful situations at the level
of the personality, through determining illness and illness course
characteristics, to inuencing within-episode dynamics (Rihmer
et al., 2013).
There are also no previous studies investigating the role of
possible mediating factors, such as hopelessness, in the association
between affective temperaments and suicidal behavior. Because it
is well known that patients with BD-II are at a higher risk for
attempting and completing suicide (Pompili et al., 2009; Rihmer
and Pestality, 1999) and that hopelessness has been found to be a
good predictor of suicidal behavior (Beck et al., 1990; Akiskal,
2007), understanding the relationship between these factors, and
the possibly differential association of these factors, in patients
with BD-I and BD-II disorders would give us better insight in to the
nature of the emergence of suicidal behavior (Pompili et al., 2012).
The nding of hopelessness as the most important variable
when compared with depression is consistent with the nature of
these psychopathological features (Acosta et al., 2012). A recent
meta-analysis revealed that previous suicide attempts and hope-
lessness were the main risk factors for suicide, and that early
onset, depressive symptoms, and family history of suicide were
the main risk factors for nonfatal suicide related behavior (Ryu
et al., 2010; Hawton et al., 2005). We cannot dismiss the possibility
that hopelessness may also, at least in part, represent a conse-
quence of a more severe course of illness, especially those with
lifetime depressive burden, and predispose to suicidality from that
perspective as well (Acosta et al., 2012). Hopelessness about the
future in suicidal individuals is a multi-faceted construct but lack
of positive future thinking is more important than presence of
negative future thinking (Fountoulakis et al., 2012).
Patients with bipolar disorder have recurrent uctuating mood
episodes with functional impairment, (Weinstock and Miller, 2008)
which might induce chronic distress and increase suicide related
behaviors (Ryu et al., 2010; MacKinnon et al., 2003). Because suicide
and suicidal behaviors are the result of a combination of individual risk
factors, precipitating stressors, and current disease features, the
prediction of a suicide attempt for a given patient on the basis of risk
factors statistically associated with suicide or suicide attempts in
populations of patients with bipolar disorder is difcult (Song et al.,
2012). For Pompili et al. not only the absolute elevations of each
temperament may be associated with psychopathological symptoms
but also that the individual pattern of temperaments may be
associated with a higher suicidal risk (Pompili et al., 2012). However,
what we so far know about the risk factors associated with suicidal
thinking and behavior in bipolar disorder has overwhelmingly been
derived by studying individuals who are in the acute phase of their
disorder (Acosta et al., 2012).
Many studies have investigated clinical characteristics asso-
ciated with suicidal behavior. Gender has been associated with
suicidal behavior in BD: men have a 4-fold greater risk for suicide
than women (Suicidology AAo, 2000; American Psychiatric
Association, 2003; World Health Organization WHO, 2003). Rela-
tive to the risk in the general population, BD is associated with an
increased risk of suicidal behavior in women and a higher lethality
in men (Parmentier et al., 2012).
In particular, careful evaluation and effective management of
bipolar depression among patients with mood disorder during
major depressive episodes is necessary to prevent suicide attempts
in bipolar disorder (Ryu et al., 2010). While suicidal ideation and a
history of attempted suicide are among the most important risks
for suicide (Osman et al., 2001; Kuo et al., 2001), only a few studies
have taken into account both suicidal ideas and attempts in
assessing the risk factors (Suttajit et al., 2013). The characteristics
associated with suicidal behavior in patients with BD may stimu-
late the development of specic therapeutic strategies; these may
include emotional and hostility regulation and problem-solving
therapies or specic treatment of comorbid social phobia or
addiction (Parmentier et al., 2012; Gray and Otto, 2001; Stewart
et al., 2009). Suicide prevention strategies are currently based on
screening for the numerous risk factors (de Moraes et al., 2013).
4.6. Risk factors associated with components of religious and
spiritual components
Religiosity and Spirituality are important aspects to identify
groups at risk of suicide in BD. However, there is a lack of studies
on their impact on bipolar disorder and little is known about them
(Azorin et al., 2013).
Dervic et al. (2011) related higher score on the moral or
religious objections to suicide subscale of the Reason for Living
Inventory (RFLI) with fewer suicidal acts in depressed bipolar
patients. The strength of this association was comparable to that of
aggression scores and suicidal behavior, and had an independent
effect. A possible protective role of moral or religious objections to
suicide deserves consideration in the assessment and treatment of
suicidality in bipolar disorder. In this study (Dervic et al., 2011),
patients who reported religious afliation were compared with 51
patients without religious afliation in terms of sociodemographic
and clinical characteristics and history of suicidal behavior. The
results were patients with religious afliation had comparatively
higher scores on the moral or religious objections to suicide
subscale of the RFLI, lower lifetime aggression, and less comorbid
alcohol and substance abuse and childhood abuse experience
(Dervic et al., 2011).
In another hand, Azorin et al. (2013) identied another point of
view. In their sample, Compared to Low Religious Involvement
(LRI), High Religious Involvement (HRI) patients did not differ with
respect to their religious afliation but had a later age at onset of
their affective illness with more hospitalizations, suicide attempts,
associated hypomanic features, switches under antidepressant
treatment, prescription of tricyclics, comorbid obsessive compul-
sive disorder, and family history of affective disorder in rst-
degree relatives. The following independent variables were asso-
ciated with religious involvement: age, depressive temperament,
mixed polarity of rst episode, and chronic depression. The study
concluded that in depressive patients belonging to the bipolar
spectrum, high religious involvement associated with mixed
features may increase the risk of suicidal behavior, despite the
existence of religious afliation.
The current study (Azorin et al., 2013) may help understand
some potential negative effects of religious involvement in depres-
sive patients belonging to the bipolar spectrum. First of all, their
ndings may be in line with the hypothesis of Cruz et al. (2010)
that higher levels of distress as such caused by mixed episodes
and/or chronic depression, would prompt patients to seek relief
from religion, and therefore increase the frequency of their
religious behaviors. However, it could be that, once depressed,
HRI patients become the victims of their religious commitment
and that, in this case, religion exerts harmful effects on health.
Actually, for an individual with depressive temperament char-
acterized by a rigid duty - orientation of his behavior, which
distinguishes itself by an overidentication with what is norma-
tively expected or by a meticulous fulllment of social norms
(Tellenbach, 1974), experiencing hypomanic social desinhibition
may hardly be assimilated in his usual way of life. This egodys-
tonic experience could therefore appear to consciousness under
the form of obsessive thoughts such as the fear of committing a
sin or an excessive guilt and give rise to compulsive religious
behaviors, such as those found in our HRI patients. In those cases,
L.d.S. Costa et al. / Journal of Affective Disorders 170 (2015) 237254 250
it is likely that religious involvement may aggravate their guilt
feelings or the sinful character of their hypomanic experiences,
enhancing thereby the suicidal tendencies. This may contribute to
explain why in the case of some mixed depressive patients,
religiosity is unlikely to be associated with less suicidal behavior
(Azorin et al., 2013).
The last study (Pawlak et al., 2013) conrms what Dervic et al.
analyzed, afrming that subjective sense of religious involvement
may play a protective role in some communities (Sisask et al.,
2010). Patients, who have not declared their commitment to any
religion, undertook suicidal attempts signicantly more often and
had more relatives, who had died of suicide, in comparison with
those involved in religion (Dervic et al., 2004).
5. Conclusion
The results of the studies in the literature show that the risk
factors associated with bipolar disorder and suicide exist and are
relevant to clinicians and researchers, whereas knowledge of such
inuence better diagnosis and prognosis of BD cases involving
suicide risk. Notwithstanding the differences in some points of the
studies, research becomes important to maintain the high quality
of knowledge of the disorder and its peculiarities, seeking
improved quality of life for people suffering from bipolar disorder.
Role of funding source
We have no foundation source.
Conict of interest
Mr. Costa, Mr. Alencar, Mr. Nascimento and Drs. Maria do Socorro, Cludio,
Sally, Regiane, Bianca, Roberto, Marcos Antonio, Alberto and Modesto have no
conicts of interest or nancial ties to report.
Acknowledgments
The authors of this review would like to thank the support of the Suicidology
Research Group, Federal University of Cear (UFC/Brazil)/Conselho Nacional de
Desenvolvimento Cientco e Tecnolgico (CNPq/Brazil) and the Laboratrio de
Escrita Cientca (LABESCI/Brazil)Medical School of Federal University of Cariri
(UFCA/Brazil).
References
Abreu, L.N., Lafer, B., Baca-Garcia, E., et al., 2009. Suicidal ideation and suicide
attempts in bipolar disorder type I: an update for the clinician. Rev. Bras.
Psiquiatr. 31 (3), 271280.
Acosta, F.J., Vega, D., Navarro, S., et al., 2012. Hopelessness and suicidal risk in
bipolar disorder. A study in clinically nonsyndromal patients. Compr. Psychiatry
53 (8), 11031109.
Akiskal, H., 2007. Targeting suicide preventing to modiable risk factors: has
bipolar II been overlooked? Acta Psychiatr. Scand. 116 (6), 395402.
Akiskal, H.S., Maser, J.D., Zeller, P.J., et al., 1995. Switching from unipolar to bipolar
II. An 11-year prospective study of clinical and temperamental predictors in 559
patients. Arch. Gen. Psychiatry 52, 114123.
Akiskal, H.S., Benazzi, F., Perugi, G., et al., 2005. Agitated unipolar depression re-
conceptualized as a depressive mixed state: Implications for the
antidepressant-suicide controversy. J. Affect. Disord. 85 (3), 245258.
Algorta, G.P., Youngstrom, E.A., Frazier, T.W., et al., 2011. Suicidality in pediatric
bipolar disorder: predictor or outcome of family processes and mixed mood
presentation? Bipolar Disord. 13 (1), 7686.
Amaddeo, F., Bisof, G., Bonizzato, P., et al., 1995. Mortality among patients with
psychiatric illness. A ten-year case register study in an area with a community-
based system of care. Br. J. Psychiatry 166, 783788.
American Psychiatric Association, 2003. Practice guideline for the assessment and
treatment of patients with suicidal behaviors. Am. J. Psychiatry 160 (Suppl. 11),
S1S60.
American Psychiatric Association, 2013. Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental
Disorders, 5th ed. American Psychiatric Association, Arlington, VA (DSM-5).
Angst, F., Stassen, H.H., Clayton, P.J., et al., 2002. Mortality of patients with mood
disorders: follow-up over 3438 years. J. Affect. Disord. 68, 167181.
Angst, J., Angst, F., Gerber-Werder, R., et al., 2005. Suicide in 406 mood-disorder
patients with and without long-term medication: a 40 to 44 years' follow- up.
Arch. Suicide Res. 9 (3), 279300.
Antypa, N., Antonioli, M., Serretti, A., 2013. Clinical, psychological and environ-
mental predictors of prospective suicide events in patients with Bipolar
Disorder. J. Psychiatr. Res. 47 (11), 18001808.
Arat, M., Demeter, E., Rihmer, Z., et al., 1988. Retrospective psychiatric assessment
of 200 suicides in Budapest. Acta Psychiatr. Scand. 77, 454456.
Arias, F., Szerman, N., Vega, P., et al., 2013. Alcohol abuse or dependence and other
psychiatric disorders. Madrid study on the prevalence of dual pathology. Ment.
Health Subst. Use: Dual Diagn. 6 (4), 339350.
Azorin, J.-M., Kaladijan, A., Fakra, E., et al., 2013. Religious involvement in major
depression: protective or risky behavior? The relevance of bipolar spectrum. J.
Affect Disord. 150 (3), 753759.
Azorin, J.M., Kaladjian, A., Adida, M., et al., 2009. Risk factors associated with
lifetime suicide attempts in bipolar I patients: ndings from a French national
Cohort. Compr. Psychiatry 50 (2), 115120.
Azorin, J.M., Aubrun, E., Bertsch, J., et al., 2009. Mixed states vs. pure mania in the
French sample of the EMBLEM study: results at baseline and 24 months
European mania in bipolar longitudinal evaluation of medication. BMC Psy-
chiatry 9, 3340.
Azorin, J.M., Kaladjian, A., Adida, M., et al., 2009. Risk factors associated with
lifetime suicide attempts in bipolar I patients: ndings from a French National
Cohort. Compr. Psychiatry 50 (2), 115120.
Azorin, J.M., Kaladjian, A., Besnier, N., et al., 2010. Suicidal behavior in a French
Cohort of major depressive patients: characteristics of attempters and non-
attempters. J. Affect Disord. 123 (13), 8794.
Balzs, J., Lecrubier, Y., Csiszr, N., et al., 2003. Prevalence and comorbidity of affective
disorders in persons making suicide attempts in Hungary: importance of the rst
depressive episodes and of bipolar II diagnoses. J. Affect Disord. 76, 113119.
Baldessarini, R.J., Pompili, M., Tondo, L., 2006. Suicide in bipolar disorder: risks and
management. CNS Spectr. 11, 465471.
Baldessarini, R.J., Salvatore, P., Khalsa, H.-M.K., 2010. Dissimilar morbidity following
initial mania versus mixed-states in type-I bipolar disorder. J. Affect Disord.
126, 299302.
Baldessarini, R.J., Undurraga, J., Vzquez, G.H., et al., 2012. Predominant recurrence
polarity among 928 adult international bipolar I disorder patients. Acta
Psychiatr. Scand. 125 (4), 293302.
Barnett, J.H., Huang, J., Perlis, R.H., 2010. Personality and bipolar disorder: dissecting
state and trait associations between mood and personality. Psychol. Med., 112.
Beck, A.T., Brown, G., Berchick, R.J., et al., 1990. Relationship between hopelessness
and ultimate suicide: a replication with psychiatric outpatients. Am. J. Psychia-
try 147, 190195.
Bellivier, F., Yon, L., Luquiens, A., et al., 2011. Suicidal attempts in bipolar disorder:
results from an observational study (EMBLEM). Bipolar Disord. 13 (4), 377386.
Benazzi, F., 2007. Bipolar disorderfocus on bipolar II disorder and mixed depres-
sion. Lancet 369, 935945.
Black, D., Monahan, P., Winokur, G., 2002. The relationship between DST results and
suicidal behavior. Ann. Clin. Psychiatry 14, 8388.
Black, D.W., Warrack, G., Winokur, G., 1985. Excess mortality among psychiatric
patients. The Iowa record-linkage study. J. Am. Med. Assoc. 253, 5861.
Blair-West, G.W., Cantor, C.H., Mellsop, G.W., et al., 1999. Lifetime suicide risk in
major depression: sex and age determinants. J. Affect. Disord. 55, 171e8.
Brent, D.A., Perper, J.A., Moritz, G., et al., 1993. Stressful life events, psychopathol-
ogy, and adolescent suicide: a case control study. Suicide Life Threat. Behav. 23
(3), 179187.
Brent, D.A., Perper, J.A., Moritz, G., et al., 1994. Familial risk factors for adolescent
suicide: a case-control study. Acta Psychiatr. Scand. 89 (1), 5258.
Bruce, M.L., Leaf, P.J., Rozal, G.P., et al., 1994. Psychiatric status and 9-year mortality
data in the New haven epidemiologic catchment area study. Am. J. Psychiatry
151, 716721.
Carroll, B.J., Feinberg, M., Greden, J.F., et al., 1981. A specic laboratory test for the
diagnosis of melancholia. Standardization, validation, and clinical utility. Arch.
Gen. Psychiatry 38, 1522.
Cassidy, F., 2011. Risk factors of attempted suicide in bipolar disorder. Suicide Life
Threat. Behav. 41 (1), 611.
Cassidy, F., Ritchie, J.C., Carroll, B.J., 1998. Plasma dexamethasone concentration and
cortisol response during manic episodes. Biol. Psychiatry 43, 747754.
Cervantes, P., Gelber, S., Kin, F.N., et al., 2001. Circadian secretion of cortisol in
bipolar disorder. J. Psychiatry Neurosc. 26, 411416.
Christensen, J., Vestergaard, M., Mortensen, P.B., et al., 2007. Epilepsy and risk of
suicide: a population-based case-control study. Lancet Neurol. 6, 693698.
Clements, C., Morriss, R., Jones, S., et al., 2013. Suicide in bipolar disorder in a
national English sample, 19962009: frequency, trends and characteristics.
Psychol. Med. 43 (12), 25932602.
Cookson, J.C., Silverstone, T., Williams, S., et al., 1985. Plasma cortisol levels in
mania: associated clinical ratings and changes during treatment with haloper-
idol. Br. J. Psychiatry 146, 498502.
Coryell, W., Schlesser, M., 2001. The dexamethasone suppression test and suicide
prediction. Am. J. Psychiatry 2001 (158), 748.
Cruz, M., Pincus, H.A., Welsh, D.E., et al., 2010. The relationship between religious
involvement and clinical status of patients with bipolar disorder. Bipolar
Disord. 12, 6876.
Cuijpers, P., Smit, F., 2002. Excess mortality in depression: a meta-analysis of
community studies. J. Affect. Disord. 72, 227236.
de Moraes, P.H.P., Neves, F.S., Vasconcelos, A.G., et al., 2013. Relationship between
neuropsychological and clinical aspects and suicide attempts in euthymic
bipolar patients. Psicologia: Reexao e Critica 26 (1), 160167.
L.d.S. Costa et al. / Journal of Affective Disorders 170 (2015) 237254 251
Daban, C., Vieta, E., Mackin, P., et al., 2005. Hypothalamic-pituitaryadrenal axis and
bipolar disorder. Psychiatric Clin N. Am. 28, 469480.
Daban, C., Colom, F., Sanchez-Moreno, J., et al., 2006. Clinical correlates of rst-
episode polarity in bipolar disorder. Compr. Psychiatry 47, 433437.
Dahl, R.E., Ryan, N.D., Puig-Antich, J., et al., 1991. 24-hour cortisol measures in
adolescents with major depression: a controlled study. Biol. Psychiatry 1991
(30), 2536.
Dalton, J.E., Cate-Carter, T.D., Mundo, E., et al., 2003. Suicide risk in bipolar patients:
the role of co-morbid substance use disorders. Bipolar Disord. 5, 5861.
De Abreu, L.N., Nery, F.G., Harkavy-Friedman, J.M., et al., 2012. Suicide attempts are
associated with worse quality of life in patients with bipolar disorder type I.
Compr. Psychiatry 53 (2), 125129.
Dervic, K., et al., 2004. Religious afliation an suicide attempt. Am. J. Psychiatry 161
(12), 23032308.
Dervic, K., Carballo, J.J., Baca-Garcia, E., et al., 2011. Moral or religious objections to
suicide may protect against suicidal behavior in bipolar disorder. J. Clin.
Psychiatry 72 (10), 13901396.
Duval, F., Mokrani, M.C., Correa, H., et al., 2001. Lack of effect of HPA axis
hyperactivity on hormonal responses to d-fenuramine in major depressed
patients: implications for pathogenesis of suicidal behavior. Psychoneuroendo-
crinology 26, 521537.
Dwivedi, Y., Rizavi, H.S., Conley, R.R., et al., 2003. Altered gene expression of brain-
derived neurotrophic factor and receptor tyrosine kinase B in postmortem brain
of suicide subjects. Arch. Gen. Psychiatry 60 (8), 804815.
Eroglu, M.Z., Karakus, G., Tamam, L., 2013. Bipolar disorder and suicide. Dusunen
Adam. 26 (2), 139147.
Etain, B., Aas, M., Andreassen, O.A., et al., 2013. Childhood trauma is associated with
severe clinical characteristics of bipolar disorders. J. Clin. Psychiatry 74 (10),
991998.
Evans, S.J., Prossin, A.R., Harrington, G.J., et al., 2012. Fats and factors: lipid proles
associate with personality factors and suicidal history in bipolar subjects. PLoS
One 7 (1), e29297.
Fagiolini, A., Frank, E., Houck, P.R., et al., 2002. Prevalence of obesity and weight
change during treatment in patients with bipolar I disorder. J. Clin. Psychiatry
63, 528533.
Fagiolini, A., Kupfer, D.J., Rucci, P., et al., 2004. Suicide attempts and ideation in
patients with bipolar I disorder. J. Clin. Psychiatry 65, 509514.
Fagiolini, A., Frank, E., Scott, J.A., et al., 2005. Metabolic syndrome in bipolar
disorder: ndings from the Bipolar Disorder Center for Pennsylvanians. Bipolar
Disord. 7, 424430.
Fattal, O., Budur, K., Vaughan, A.J., et al., 2006. Review of the literature on major
mental disorders in adult patients with mitochondrial diseases. Psychosomatics
47, 17.
Fattal, O., Link, J., Quinn, K., et al., 2007. Psychiatric comorbidity in 36 adults with
mitochondrial cytopathies. CNS Spectr. 12, 429438.
Finseth, P.I., Morken, G., Andreassen, O.A., et al., 2012. Risk factors related to lifetime
suicide attempts in acutely admitted bipolar disorder inpatients. Bipolar Disord.
14 (7), 727734.
Fountoulakis, K.N., Grunze, H., Panagiotidis, P., et al., 2008. Treatment of bipolar
depression: an update. J. Affect. Disord. 109, 2134.
Fountoulakis, K.N., Pantoula, E., Siamouli, M., et al., 2012. Development of the Risk
Assessment Suicidality Scale (RASS): a population-based study. J. Affect. Disord.
138 (3), 449457.
Freeman, A.J., Youngstrom, E.A., Michalak, E., et al., 2009. Quality of life in pediatric
bipolar disorder. Pediatrics 123, e446e452.
Galfalvy, H., Huang, Y.Y., Oquendo, M.A., et al., 2009. Increased risk of suicide
attempt in mood disorders and TPH1 genotype. J. Affect. Disord. 115, 331338.
Galfavy, H., Oquendo, M.A., Carballo, J.J., et al., 2006. Clinical predictors of suicidal
acts after major depression in bipolar disorder: a prospective study. Bipolar
Disord. 8 (5 Pt 2), 586595.
Gau, S.S., Cheng, A.T., 2004. Mental illness and accidental death. Case-control
psychological autopsy study. Br. J. Psychiatry 185, 422428.
Ghaemi, S.N., Hsu, D.J., Soldani, F., et al., 2003. Antidepressants in bipolar disorder:
the case for caution. Bipolar Disord. 5, 421433.
Gilbert, A.M., Garno, J.L., Braga, R.J., et al., 2011. Clinical and cognitive correlates of
suicide attempts in bipolar disorder: Is suicide predictable? J. Clin. Psychiatry
72 (8), 10271033.
Godwin, C.D., 1984. The dexamethasone suppression test in acute mania. J. Affect.
Disord. 7, 281286.
Goldstein, T.R., Ha, W., Axelson, D.A., et al., 2012. Predictors of prospectively
examined suicide attempts among youth with bipolar disorder. Arch. Gen.
Psychiatry 69 (11), 11131122.
Gomes, F.A., Kauer-SantAnna, M., Magalhes, P.V., et al., 2010. Obesity is associated
with previous suicide attempts in bipolar disorder. Acta Neuropsychiatr. 22 (2),
6367.
Goodwin, F.K., Jamison, K.R., 2007. Manic-Depressive Illness: Bipolar Disorders and
Recurrent Depression. Oxford University Press, New York, NY.
Gould, M.S., Fisher, P., Parides, M., et al., 1996. Psychosocial risk factors of child and
adolescent completed suicide. Arch. Gen. Psychiatry 53 (12), 11551162.
Gray, S.M., Otto, M.W., 2001. Psychosocial approaches to suicide prevention:
applications to patients with bipolar disorder. J. Clin. Psychiatry 62 (Suppl.
25), S56S64.
Harris, E.C., Barraclough, B., 1997. Suicide as an outcome for mental disorders. A
metaanalysis. Br. J. Psychiatry 170, 205228.
Harris, E.C., Barraclough, B., 1998. Excess mortality of mental disorder. Br. J.
Psychiatry 173, 1153.
Hasin, D.S., Goodwin, R.D., Stinson, F.S., et al., 2005. Epidemiology of major
depressive disorder: results from the National Epidemiologic Survey on
Alcoholism and Related Conditions. Arch. Gen. Psychiatry 62, 10971106.
Hawton, K., Sutton, L., Haw, C., et al., 2005. Suicide and attempted suicide in bipolar
disorder: a systematic review of risk factors. J. Clin. Psychiatry 66, 693704.
Heuser, I., Yassouridis, A., Holsboer, F., 1994. The combined dexamethasone/CRH
test: a rened laboratory test for psychiatric disorders. J. Psychiatr. Res. 28
(341356), 138.
Hibbeln, J.R., Nieminen, L.R., Blasbalg, T.L., et al., 2006. Healthy intakes of n-3 and n-
6 fatty acids: estimations considering worldwide diversity. Am. J. Clin. Nutr. 83,
1483S1493S.
Hiroeh, U., Appleby, L., Mortensen, P.B., et al., 2001. Death by homicide, suicide, and
other unnatural causes in people with mental illness: a population- based
study. Lancet 358, 21102112.
Huber, R.S., Coon, H., Kim, N., et al., 2014. Altitude is a risk factor for completed
suicide in bipolar disorder. Med. Hypotheses 82 (3), 377381.
Isometsa, E.T., Henriksson, M.M., Aro, H.M., et al., 1994. Suicide in bipolar disorder
in Finland. Am J Psychiatry. 151 (7), 10201024.
Jamison, K.R., 2000. Suicide and bipolar disorder. J. Clin. Psychiatry 61 (Supp l9),
S47S51.
Jimnez, E., Arias, B., Mitjans, M., et al., 2013. Genetic variability at IMPA2, INPP1
and GSK3b increases the risk of suicidal behavior in bipolar patients. Eur.
Neuropsychopharmacol. 23 (11), 14521462.
Jokinen, J., Nordstrm, P., 2008. HPA axis hyperactivity as suicide predictor in
elderly mood disorder inpatients. Psychoneuroendocrinology 33, 1387.
Jokinen, J., Nordstrm, P., 2009. HPA axis hyperactivity and attempted suicide in
young adult mood disorder inpatients. J. Affective Disord. 2009 (116), 117.
Jokinen, J., Nordstrm, A., Nordstrm, P., 2009. CSF 5-HIAA and DST nonsuppres-
sionorthogonal biologic risk factors for suicide in male mood disorder
inpatients. Psychiat. Res. 165, 96.
Jou, S.H., Chiu, N.Y., Liu, C.S., 2009. Mitochondrial dysfunction and psychiatric
disorders. Chang Gung. Med. J. 32, 370379.
Joukamaa, M., Helivaara, M., Knekt, P., et al., 2001. Mental disorders and cause-
specic mortality. Br. J. Psychiatry 179, 498502.
Kamali, M., Saunders, E.F.H., Prossin, A.R., et al., 2012. Associations between suicide
attempts and elevated bedtime salivary cortisol levels in bipolar disorder. J.
Affect. Disord. 136 (3), 350358.
Karege, F., Vaudan, G., Schwald, M., et al., 2005. Neurotrophin levels in postmortem
brains of suicide victims and the effects of antemortem diagnosis and
psychotropic drugs. Mol. Brain Res. 136 (12), 2937.
Kato, T., 2006. The role of mitochondrial dysfunction in bipolar disorder. Drug News
Perspect. 19, 597602.
Kenneson, A., Funderburk, J.S., Maisto, S.A., 2013. Risk factors for secondary
substance use disorders in people with childhood and adolescent-onset bipolar
disorder: opportunities for prevention. Compr. Psychiatry 54 (5), 439446.
Kerner, B., Rao, A.R., Christensen, B., et al., 2013. Rare genomic variants link bipolar
disorder with anxiety disorders to CREB-regulated intracellular signaling
pathways. Front Psychiat. 4, 154.
Kheirabadi, G.R., Hashemi, S.J., Akbaripour, S., et al., 2012. Risk factors of suicide
reattempt in patients admitted to khorshid hospital, Isfahan, Iran, 2009. Iran. J.
Epidemiology. 8 (3), 3946.
Koene, S., Kozicz, T.L., Rodenburg, R.J., et al., 2009. Major depression in adolescent
children consecutively diagnosed with mitochondrial disorder. J. Affect. Disord.
114, 327332.
Kuo, W.H., Gallo, J.J., Tien, A.Y., 2001. Incidence of suicide ideation and attempts in
adults: the 13-year follow-up of a community sample in Baltimore, Maryland.
Psychol. Med. 31 (7), 11811191.
Kupfer, D.J., 2005. The increasing medical burden in bipolar disorder. J. Am. Med.
Assoc. 293, 25282530.
Leon, A.C., Solomon, D.A., Li, C., et al., 2012. Antiepileptic drugs for bipolar disorder
and the risk of suicidal behavior: a 30-year observational study. Am. J.
Psychiatry 169 (3), 285291.
Leverich, G.S., et al., 2003. Factors associated with suicide attempts in 648 patients
with bipolar disorder in the Stanley Foundation Bipolar Network. J. Clin.
Psychiatry 64 (5), 506515.
Lindqvist, D., Isaksson, A., Trskman-Bendz, L., et al., 2008. Salivary cortisol and
suicidal behaviora follow-up study. Psychoneuroendocrinology 33, 1061.
Linkowski, P., Kerkhofs, M., Van Onderbergen, A., et al., 1994. The 24-hour proles
of cortisol, prolactin, and growth hormone secretion in mania. Arch. Gen.
Psychiatry 51, 616624.
Lopez, D.L., Brezo, J., Rouleau, G., et al., 2007. Effect of tryptophan hydroxylase-2
gene variants on suicide risk in major depression. Biol. Psychiatry 62, 7280.
Lopez, P., Mosquera, F., deLeon, J., et al., 2001. Suicide attempts in bipolar patients. J.
Clin. Psychiatry 62, 963966.
MacKinnon, D.F., Zandi, P.P., Gershon, E., et al., 2003. Rapid switching of mood in
families with multiple cases of bipolar disorder. Arch. Gen. Psychiatry 60,
921928.
Magno, L.A., Miranda, D.M., Neves, F.S., et al., 2010. Association between AKT1 but
not AKTIP genetic variants and increased risk for suicidal behavior in bipolar
patients. Genes Brain Behav. 9, 411418.
Magno, L.A.V., Santana, C.V.N., Rezende, V.B., et al., 2011. Genetic variations in
FOXO3A are associated with Bipolar Disorder without confering vulnerability
for suicidal behavior. J. Affect. Disord. 133 (3), 633637.
Manchia, M., Hajek, T., ODonovan, C., et al., 2013. Genetic risk of suicidal behavior
in bipolar spectrum disorder: analysis of 737 pedigrees. Bipolar Disord. 15 (5),
496506.
L.d.S. Costa et al. / Journal of Affective Disorders 170 (2015) 237254 252
Mann, J.J., 2003. Neurobiology of suicidal behavior. Nat. Rev. Neurosci. 4, 819.
Mao, Z., Liu, L., Zhang, R., et al., 2007. Lithium reduces FoxO3a transcriptional
activity by decreasing its intracellular content. Biol. Psychiatry 62, 14231430.
Maremmani, I., Pani, P.P., Canoniero, S., et al., 2007. Is the bipolar spectrum the
psychopathological substrate of suicidality in heroin addicts? Psychopathology
40 (5), 269277.
McElroy, S.L., Kotwal, R., Kaneria, R., et al., 2006. Antidepressants and suicidal
behavior in bipolar disorder. Bipolar Disord. 8, 596617.
McIntyre, R.S., Konarski, J.Z., 2004. Bipolar disorder: a national health concern. CNS
Spectr. 9 (11 Suppl 12), S6S15.
McIntyre, R.S., Soczynska, J.K., Konarski, J.Z., et al., 2007. Should depressive
syndromes be reclassied as "metabolic syndrome type II"? Ann. Clin. Psy-
chiatry 19, 257264.
McIntyre, R.S., Soczynska, J.K., Mancini, D., et al., 2008. The relationship between
childhood abuse and suicidality in adult bipolar disorder. Violence Vict. 23 (3),
361372.
McIntyre, R.S., Muzina, D.J., Kemp, D.E., et al., 2008. Bipolar disorder and suicide:
researchsynthesis and clinical translation. Curr. Psychiatry Rep. 10, 6672.
Michalak, E.E., Yatham, L.N., Lam, R.W., 2005. Quality of life in bipolar disorder: a
review of the literature. Health Qual. Life Outcomes 15, 372.
Miklowitz, D.J., Chang, K.D., 2008. Prevention of bipolar disorder in at-risk children:
theoretical assumptions and empirical foundations. Dev. Psychopathol. 20,
881897.
Morava, E., Gardeitchik, T., Kozicz, T., et al., 2010. Depressive behavior in children
diagnosed with a mitochondrial disorder. Mitochondrion 10, 528533.
Mykletun, A., Bjerkeset, O., Dewey, M., et al., 2007. Anxiety, depression, and cause-
specic mortality: the HUNT study. Psychosom. Med. 69, 323331.
Neves, F.S., Malloy-Diniz, L.F., Ma, Romano-Silva, et al., 2010. Is the serotonin
transporter polymorphism (5-HTTLPR) a potential marker for suicidal behavior
in bipolar disorder patients? J. Affect. Disord. 125 (1-3), 98102.
Neves, F.S., Malloy-Diniz, L., Romano-Silva, M.A., et al., 2011. The role of BDNF
genetic polymorphisms in bipolar disorder with psychiatric comorbidities.
J. Affect. Disord. 131, 307311.
Nilsson, L., Ahlbom, A., Farahmand, B.Y., et al., 2002. Risk factors in suicide in
epilepsy: a case-control study. Epilepsia 43, 644651.
Oquendo, M.A., Currier, D., Liu, S., et al., 2010. Increased risk for suicidal behavior in
comorbid bipolar disorder and alcohol use disorders. J. Clin. Psychiatry 71 (7),
902909.
sby, U., Brandt, L., Correia, N., et al., 2001. Excess mortality in bipolar and unipolar
disorder in Sweden. Arch. Gen. Psychiatry 58, 844850.
Osman, A., Bagge, C.L., Gutierrez, P.M., et al., 2001. The Suicidal Behaviors
Questionnaire-Revised (SBQ-R): validation with clinical and nonclinical sam-
ples. Assessment 8 (4), 443454.
Parmentier, C., Etain, B., Yon, L., et al., 2012. Clinical and dimensional characteristics
of euthymic bipolar patients with or without suicidal behavior. Eur. Psychiatry
27 (8), 570576.
Pasco, J., Jacka, F., Williams, L.J., et al., 2007. Leptin in depressed women: cross-
sectional and longitudinal data from an epidemiologic study. J. Affect. Disord.
107, 211225.
Pawlak, J., Dmitrzak-Weglarz, M., Skibiska, M., et al., 2013. Suicide attempts and
psychological risk factors in patients with bipolar and unipolar affective
disorder. Gen. Hosp. Psychiatry 35 (3), 309313.
Pawlak, J., Dmitrzak-Weglarz, M., Skibiska, M., et al., 2013. Suicide attempts and
clinical risk factors in patients with bipolar and unipolar affective disorders.
Gen. Hosp. Psychiatry 35 (4), 427432.
Periodicos.capes.gov.br [homepage on the Internet]. 2014. Braslia: Higher Educa-
tion Co-ordination Agency of Brazils Ministry of Education; 2000. Available
from: http://www.periodicos.capes.gov.br/. (accessed 6.6.2014.
Perugi, G., Micheli, C., Akiskal, H.S., et al., 2000. Polarity of the rst episode, clinical
characteristics, and course of manic depressive illness: a systematic retro-
spective investigation of 320 bipolar I patients. Compr Psychiatry. 41, 1318.
Pfennig, A., Kunzel, H., Kern, N., et al., 2005. Hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal
systemregulation and suicidal behavior in depression. Biol. Psychiatry 57,
336342.
Pitchot, W., Scantamburlo, G., Pinto, E., et al., 2008. Vasopressinneurophysin and
DST in major depression: relationship with suicidal behavior. J. Psychiatr. Res.
42, 684688.
Polter, A., Yang, S., Zmijewska, A.A., et al., 2009. Forkhead box, class O transcription
factors in brain: regulation and behavioral manifestation. Biol. Psychiatry 65,
150159.
Pompili, M., Rihmer, Z., Innamorati, M., et al., 2009. Assessment and treatment of
suicide risk in bipolar disorders. Expert Rev. Neurother. 9, 109136.
Pompili, M., Rihmer, Z., Akiskal, H., et al., 2012. Temperaments mediate suicide risk
and psychopathology among patients with bipolar disorders. Compr. Psychiatry
53 (3), 280285.
Pompili, M., Rihmer, Z., Akiskal, H., et al., 2012. Temperaments mediate suicide risk
and psychopathology among patients with bipolar disorders. Compr. Psychiatry
53 (3), 280285.
Potash, J.B., Kane, H.S., Chiu, Y.-F., et al., 2000. Attempted suicide and alcoholism in
bipolar disorder: clinical and familial relationships. Am. J. Psychiatry 157,
20482050.
Quiroz, J.A., Gould, T.D., Manji, H.K., et al., 2004. Molecular effects of lithium. Mol.
Interv. 4, 259272.
Quiroz, J.A., Gray, N.A., Kato, T., et al., 2008. Mitochondrially mediated plasticity in
the pathophysiology and treatment of bipolar disorder. Neuropsychopharma-
cology 33, 25512565.
Raja, M., Azzoni, A., 2004. Suicide attempts: differences between unipolar and
bipolar patients and among groups with different lethality risk. J. Affect. Disord.
82 (3), 437442.
Ratcliffe, G.E., Enns, M.W., Belik, S.L., et al., 2008. Chronic pain conditions and
suicidal ideation and suicide attempts: an epidemiologic perspective. Clin. J.
Pain 24, 204210.
Rezin, G.T., Amboni, G., Zugno, A.I., et al., 2009. Mitochondrial dysfunction and
psychiatric disorders. Neurochem. Res. 34, 10211029.
Rihmer, Z., Pestality, P., 1999. Bipolar II disorder and suicidal behavior. Psychiatr.
Clin. N. Am. 22 (66773), ixx.
Rihmer, Z., Gonda, X., Torzsa, P., et al., 2013. Affective temperament, history of
suicide attempt and family history of suicide in general practice patients.
J. Affect. Disord. 149 (13), 350354.
Roshanaei-Moghaddam, B., Katon, W., 2009. Premature mortality from general
medical illnesses among persons with bipolar disorder: a review. Psychiatr.
Serv. 60, 147156.
Roy, A., Segal, N.L., 2001. Suicidal behavior in twins: a replication. J. Affect. Disord.
66, 7174.
Ruengorn, C., Sanichwankul, K., Niwatananun, W., et al., 2012. A risk-scoring
scheme for suicide attempts among patients with bipolar disorder in a Thai
patient cohort. Psychol. Res. Behav. Manage. 5, 3745.
Rybakowski, J.K., Twardowska, K., 1999. The dexamethasone/corticotropinreleasing
hormone test in depression in bipolar and unipolar affective illness. J. Psychiatr.
Res. 33, 363370.
Ryu, V., Jon, D.I., Cho, H.S., et al., 2010. Initial depressive episodes affect the risk of
suicide attempts in Korean patients with bipolar disorder. Yonsei. Med. J. 51 (5),
641647.
Sajatovic, M., 2005. Bipolar disorder: disease burden. Am. J. Manag. Care 11,
S80S84.
Scaglia, F., 2010. The role of mitochondrial dysfunction in psychiatric disease. Dev.
Disabil. Res. Rev. 16, 136143.
Schmider, J., Lammers, C.H., Gotthardt, U., et al., 1995. Combined dexamethasone/
corticotropin-releasing hormone test in acute and remitted manic patients, in
acute depression, and in normal controls: I. Biol. Psychiatry 38, 797802.
Sears, C., Wilson, J., Fitches, A., et al., 2013. Investigating the role of BDNF and CCK
system genes in suicidality in a familial bipolar cohort. J. Affect. Disord. 151 (2),
611617.
Serretti, A., Drago, A., De, R.D., et al., 2009. Lithium pharmacodynamics and
pharmacogenetics: focus on inositol mono phosphatase (IMPase), inositol
poliphosphatase (IPPase) and glycogen sinthase kinase 3 beta (GSK-3 beta).
Curr. Med. Chem. 16, 19171948.
Shabani, A., Teimurinejad, S., Koka, S., et al., 2013. Suicide risk factors in iranian
patients with bipolar disorder: A 21- month follow-up from BDPF study. Iran. J.
Psychiatry Behav. Sci. 7 (1), 1623.
Simon, G.E., Bauer, M.S., Ludman, E.J., et al., 2007. Mood symptoms, functional
impairment and disability in people with bipolar disorder: specic effects of
mania and depression. J. Clin. Psychiatry 68, 12371245.
Simon, G.E., Hunkeler, E., Fireman, B., et al., 2007. Risk of suicide attempt and
suicide death in patients treated for bipolar disorder. Bipolar Disord. 9,
526530.
Sisask, M., et al., 2010. Is religiosity a protective factor against attempted suicide: a
crosscultural casecontrol study. Arch. Suicide Res. 14 (1), 4455.
Song, J.Y., Hy, Y.u., Kim, S.H., et al., 2012. Assessment of risk factors related to suicide
attempts in patients with bipolar disorder. J. Nerv. Ment. Dis. 200 (11), 978984.
Stahl, S.M., 2000. Essential psychopharmacology of depression and bipolar dis-
order. Cambridge University Press, NewYork, NY.
Stewart, C.D., Quinn, A., Plever, S., et al., 2009. Comparing cognitive behavior
therapy, problem solving therapy, and treatment as usual in a high risk
population. Suicide Life Threat Behav. 39 (5), 538547.
Sublette, M., Carballo, J.J., Moreno, C., et al., 2009. Substance use disorders and
suicide attempts in bipolar subtypes. J. Psychiatry Res. 43 (3), 230238.
Suicidology AAo. 2000. American Association of Suicidology [AAS]. Ofcal 1998
statistics.
Suttajit, S., Paholpak, S., Choovanicvong, S., et al., 2013. Correlates of current suicide
risk among Thai patients with bipolar I disorder: ndings from the Thai Bipolar
Disorder Registry. Neuropsychiatry Dis. Treat. 9, 17511757.
Tellenbach, 1974. Melancholie; Problemgeschichte; Endogenit

at, Typologie, Patho-


genese, Klinik. Springer, Berlin.
Tondo, L., Albert, M.J., Baldessarini, R.J., 2006. Suicide rates in relation to health care
access in the United States: an ecological study. J. Clin. Psychiatry 67 (4),
517523.
Tripodianakis, J., Markianos, M., Sarantidis, D., et al., 2000. Neurochemical variables
in subjects with adjustment disorder after suicide attempts. Eur. Psychiatry 15,
190195.
Trouvin, J.H., Prioux-Guyonneau, M., Cohen, Y., et al., 1986. Rat brain monoamine
metabolism and hypobaric hypoxia: a new approach. Gen. Pharmacol. 17,
6973.
Tsai, S.Y., Kuo, C.J., Chen, C.C., et al., 2002. Risk factors for completed suicide in
bipolar disorder. J. Clin. Psychiatry 63, 469476.
Undurraga, J., Baldessarini, R.J., Valent, M., et al., 2011. Dissimilar suicidal risk
factors in bipolar I and II disorders. J. Clin. Psychiatry.
Undurraga, J., Baldessarini, R.J., Valenti, M., et al., 2012. Suicidal risk factors in
bipolar I and II disorder patients. J. Clin. Psychiatry 73 (6), 778782.
Vaccari, A., Brotman, S., Cimino, J., et al., 1978. Adaptive changes induced by high
altitude in the development of brain monoamine enzymes. Neurochem. Res. 3,
295311.
L.d.S. Costa et al. / Journal of Affective Disorders 170 (2015) 237254 253
Valtonen, H.M., Suominen, K., Mantere, O., et al., 2006. Prospective study of risk
factors for attempted suicide among patients with bipolar disorder. Bipolar
Disord. 8 (5 Pt 2), 576585.
WHO, 2011. Causes of Death 2008: Data Sources and Methods Department of
Health Statistics and Informatics. World Health Organization, Geneva.
Wang, P.W., Sachs, G.S., Zarate, C.A., et al., 2006. Overweight and obesity in bipolar
disorders. J. Psychiatr. Res. 40, 762764.
Weinstock, L.M., Miller, I.W., 2008. Functional impairment as a predictor of short-
term symptom course in bipolar I disorder. Bipolar Disord. 10, 437442.
Weissman, M.M., Bland, R.C., Canino, G., et al., 1999. Prevalence of suicide ideation
and suicide attempts in nine countries. Psychol. Med. 29, 917.
World Health Organization (WHO). International suicide rates. 2003.
Wulsin, L.R., Vaillant, G.E., Wells, V.E., 1999. A systematic review of the mortality of
depression. Psychosom. Med. 61, 617.
Yerevanian, B., Feusner, J., Koek, R., et al., 2004. The dexamethasone suppression
test as a predictor of suicidal behavior in unipolar depression. J. Affect. Disord.
83, 103.
Yoon, Y.H., Chen, C.M., Moss, H.B., 2011. Effect of comorbid alcohol and drug use
disorders on premature death among unipolar and bipolar disorder decedents
in the United States, 19992006. Compr. Psychiatry 52 (5), 453464.
Zhu, W., Bijur, G.N., Styles, N.A., et al., 2004. Regulation of FOXO3a by brainderived
neurotrophic factor in differentiated human SH SY5Y neuroblastoma cells.
Brain Res. Mol. Brain Res. 126, 4556.
L.d.S. Costa et al. / Journal of Affective Disorders 170 (2015) 237254 254

You might also like