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Observational Study
The Rapid Mood Screener (RMS): A novel and pragmatic screener for bipolar I disorder.
- Roger S McIntyre, Mehul D Patel, Prakash S Masand, Amanda Harrington, Patrick Gillard, Susan L McElroy, Kate Sullivan, C Brendan Montano, T Michelle Brown, Lauren Nelson, and Rakesh Jain.
- Mood Disorders Psychopharmacology Unit, University Health Network, Toronto, Canada.
- Curr Med Res Opin. 2021 Jan 1; 37 (1): 135-144.
ObjectiveDepressive episodes and symptoms of bipolar I disorder are commonly misdiagnosed as major depressive disorder (MDD) in primary care. The novel and pragmatic Rapid Mood Screener (RMS) was developed to screen for manic symptoms and bipolar I disorder features (e.g. age of depression onset) to address this unmet clinical need.MethodsA targeted literature search was conducted to select concepts thought to differentiate bipolar I from MDD and screener tool items were drafted. Items were tested and refined in cognitive debriefing interviews with individuals with self-reported bipolar I or MDD (n = 12). An observational study was conducted to evaluate predictive validity. Participants with clinical interview-confirmed bipolar I or MDD diagnoses (n = 139) completed a draft 10-item screening tool and other questionnaires. Data were analyzed to identify the smallest possible subset of items with optimized sensitivity and specificity.ResultsAdults with confirmed bipolar I (n = 67) or MDD (n = 72) participated in the observational study. Ten draft screening tool items were reduced to 6 final RMS items based on the item-level analysis. When 4 or more items of the RMS were endorsed ("yes"), sensitivity was 0.88 and specificity was 0.80; positive and negative predictive values were 0.80 and 0.88, respectively. These properties were an improvement over the Mood Disorder Questionnaire in the same analysis sample while using 60% fewer items.ConclusionThe pragmatic 6-item RMS differentiates bipolar I disorder from MDD in patients with depressive symptoms, providing real-world guidance to primary care practitioners on whether a more comprehensive assessment for bipolar I disorder is warranted.
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