Clinical phenotype and genetic risk factors for bipolar disorder with binge eating: an update.
| Author | |
|---|---|
| Abstract | :
: Clinical and genetic study of psychiatric conditions has underscored the co-occurrence of complex phenotypes and the need to refine them. Bipolar Disorder (BD) and Binge Eating (BE) behavior are common psychiatric conditions that have high heritability and high co-occurrence, such that at least one quarter of BD patients have BE (BD + BE). Genetic studies of BD alone and of BE alone suggest complex polygenic risk models, with many genetic risk loci yet to be identified. : We review studies of the epidemiology of BD+BE, its clinical features (cognitive traits, psychiatric comorbidity, and role of obesity), genomic studies (of BD, eating disorders (ED) defined by BE, and BD + BE), and therapeutic implications of BD + BE. : Subphenotyping of complex psychiatric disorders reduces heterogeneity and increases statistical power and effect size; thus, it enhances our capacity to find missing genetic (and other) risk factors. BD + BE has a severe clinical picture and genetic studies suggests a distinct genetic architecture. Differential therapeutic interventions may be needed for patients with BD + BE compared with BD patients without BE. Recognizing the BD + BE subphenotype is an example of moving towards more precise clinical and genetic entities. |
| Year of Publication | :
2019
|
| Journal | :
Expert review of neurotherapeutics
|
| Volume | :
19
|
| Issue | :
9
|
| Number of Pages | :
867-879
|
| ISSN Number | :
1473-7175
|
| URL | :
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14737175.2019.1638764
|
| DOI | :
10.1080/14737175.2019.1638764
|
| Short Title | :
Expert Rev Neurother
|
| Download citation |