Rapid Cycling in Bipolar Disorder
To the Editor: The article by Leonardo Tondo, M.D., and Ross J. Baldessarini, M.D. (1), contains an obvious mistake. The authors report that we, Maj et al. (2), and Bauer et al. (3) found a rapid-cycling course of illness in 33.3% and 50.2%, respectively, of our patients with bipolar disorder. We found that pattern instead in 13.6% of the patients with bipolar disorder who were referred to our center (as clearly stated in the Results section of our article), and we recruited for our comparative study two patients with nonrapid cycling for each patient with rapid cycling. Similarly, Bauer et al., in their multisite study, did not find an unusually high proportion of patients with rapid cycling but simply asked each site to provide an equal number of patients with rapid cycling and patients with nonrapid cycling (as specified in the Method section of their article).
As a consequence of this misunderstanding, Drs. Tondo and Baldessarini calculate an average prevalence of 24.2% for the rapid cycling pattern, which is totally erroneous, as are the risk of rapid cycling of 29.6% in women and 16.5% in men that they mention in the article, the abstract, and table 1. These erroneous data may mislead the reader and should be rectified.
1. Tondo L, Baldessarini RJ: Rapid cycling in women and men with bipolar manic-depressive disorders. Am J Psychiatry 1998; 155:1434–1436Google Scholar
2. Maj M, Magliano L, Pirozzi R, Marasco C, Guarneri M: Validity of rapid cycling as a course specifier for bipolar disorder. Am J Psychiatry 1994; 151:1015–1019Google Scholar
3. Bauer MS, Calabrese J, Dunner DL, Post R, Whybrow PC, Gyulai L, Tay LK, Younkin SR, Bynum D, Lavori P, Price RA: Multisite data reanalysis of the validity of rapid cycling as a course modifier for bipolar disorder in DSM-IV. Am J Psychiatry 1994; 151:506–515Link, Google Scholar