Korean Medication Algorithm for Bipolar Disorder: changes in preferred medications for mania over 20 years
D.-I. Jon, Y. S. Woo, J.-H. Jeong, J.-S. Seo, J. G. Lee, B.-H. Yoon, I. Sohn, W.-M. Bahk

TL;DR
This paper examines how medication preferences for treating mania in bipolar disorder have changed among Korean experts over 20 years.
Contribution
It identifies trends in medication preference shifts, particularly the growing use of atypical antipsychotics.
Findings
Combination therapy with mood stabilizers and atypical antipsychotics was consistently preferred for acute mania.
Valproate preference showed a reverse U-shaped trend, possibly due to concerns about teratotoxicity.
Atypical antipsychotics like quetiapine and aripiprazole became more preferred since 2014.
Abstract
Majority of international guidelines for bipolar disorders are based on evidences from clinical trials. In contrast, the Korean Medication Algorithm Project for Bipolar Disorder (KMAP-BP) was developed to adopt an expert-consensus paradigm which was more practical and specific to the atmosphere in Korea. In this study, preferred medication strategies for acute mania over six consecutively published KMAP-BP (2002, 2006, 2010, 2014, 2018, and 2022) were investigated. A written survey using a nine-point scale was asked to Korean experts about the appropriateness of various treatment strategies and treatment agents. A written survey asked about the appropriateness of various treatment strategies and treatment agents commonly used by clinicians as the first-line. The most preferred option for the initial treatment of mania was a combination of a mood stabilizer (MS) and an atypical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPharmacy and Medical Practices · Bipolar Disorder and Treatment · Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
