articlePsychopharmacology BulletinAug 12, 2025Closed access

Defining the Clinical Course of Bipolar Disorder: Response, Remission, Relapse, Recurrence, and Roughening

The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston

PubMed
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Abstract

Objective

This manuscript presents working definitions for key clinical course indicators for bipolar disorder, including response, remission, relapse, recurrence, and roughening. METHOD: A work group of experts in bipolar disorder reviewed prior efforts to define clinical course indicators for unipolar depression and for schizophrenia. Using these efforts as templates, the work group developed consensus operational definitions. The rationale for each of the definitions was a point of time when a treatment decision needed to be made.

Results

The group defined response as a 50% reduction in a score from a standard rating scale of symptomatology from an appropriate baseline, regardless of index episode type (manic, depressed, or mixed). In addition, the other pole cannot be significantly worsened during response. Remission was defined as absence or minimal symptoms of both mania and depression for at least 1 week. Sustained remission requires at least eight consecutive weeks of remission, and perhaps as many as 12 weeks. A relapse/recurrence was defined as a return to the full syndrome criteria of an episode of mania, mixed episode, or depression following a remission of any duration. Roughening was defined as a return of symptoms at a subsyndromal level, perhaps representing a prodrome of an impending episode.

Citation impact

51
total citations
FWCI
3.29
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98%
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0
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Authors

15

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Mania
  • Prodrome
  • Bipolar disorder
  • Psychology
  • Young Mania Rating Scale
  • Depression (economics)
  • Rating scale
  • Psychiatry
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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