Lithium plus valproate combination therapy versus monotherapy for relapse prevention in bipolar i disorder (BALANCE): A randomised open-label trial

John R. Geddes, Guy M. Goodwin, Jennifer Rendell, Richard Morriss, Nicola Alder, Ed Juszczak, Jean Michel Azorin, Andrea Cipriani, Michael J. Ostacher, Shôn Lewis, Mary Jane Attenburrow, Brigid Carter, Jane Hainsworth, Christine Healey, Will Stevens, Emma Der Van Gucht, Heather Young, Christina Davies, Richard Peto, Thomas R E BarnesVivienne Curtis, Tony Johnson, Michael Marven, Mohammed Arif, Janet Bruce, Gary Drybala, Enda Hayden, Harsh P. Jhingan, Mangesh Marudkar, Richard Hillier, Sara Barrett, Jasvinder Sing Lidder, Mark McCartney, Hugh Middleton, Frank Ononye, Ramesh D. Solanki, Ignasi Agell, Rubina Anjum, Neil Hunt, Peter Jones, Rajini Ramana, Jeremy Chase, Larry Ayuba, Iain Macmillan, Albert Michael, Sophia Frangou, Harm Gijsman, Elizabeth Parker, Mary Phillips, Graham Behr, Peter Tyrer, Alison Conway, Nicol Ferrier, Tim Oakley, Nicholas Tower, Allan Young, Roger Chitty, Carl Littlejohns, Anil Suri, Mohammad Iqbal, Panayiotis Zikis, Ian Anderson, David O'Driscoll, Natalie Robbins, Graham Ash, Imran Chaudhry, Venu Duddu, Paul Reed, Stephan Van Wyk, Adarsh Vohra, Zukiswa Zingela, Tariq Mahmood, Heidi Diedricks, Mohammad A. Faizal, James McCarthy, David Briess, Alfonso Ceccherini-Nelli, Elizabeth Clifford, Robert Croos, Jane Da Rosa Davis, Lalitha De Silva, Savitha Eranti, Ran Mahmoud, Anil Maurya, Peter Partovi-Tabar, Yousuf Rahimi, Jacqueline Tuson, Jayne Greening, Colin Campbell, Jasdey Singh Grewal, Ashok Kumar, Dieter Schultewolter, David Baldwin, Nick Best, Nicola Herod, Richard Polson, Charles Shawcross, Umama Khan, Nadim Almoshmosh, Mamdouh El-Adl, Chandrashekar Rao, Bryan Timmins, Rob Bale, Sandeep Bansal, Zubin Bhagwagar, Ali Carre, Julia Cartright, Julie Chalmers, Apa Chisuse, Phil Davison, David Elwell, Seena Fazel, David Geaney, Simon Hampson, Paul Harrison, Emma Henderson, Sophie Johnson, Christopher Massey, Alan Ogilvie, Denis O'Leary, Catherine Oppenheimer, Michael Orr, Digby Quested, Peter Sargent, Philip Wilkinson, Tafazul Hussain, Steve Franklin, John King, Janet White, Ourania Anagnosti, Bill Bruce-Jones, Jonathan Evans, Geoffrey Woodin, George Kirov, Richard Laugharne, Andrew E. Blewett, Subhash Gupta, Bharat Saluja, Chris Kelly, Timothy Leeman, Mark Macauley, Deidre Shields, Jacqui Anderson, Alison McRae, Mark Taylor, Lucy Carrick, Elizabeth Hare, Diana Morrison, Muriele Maurel, Jacques Derouet, Natalie Le Garzic, Bruno Millet, Tiphaine Droulout, Chantal Henry, Marion Leboyer, Alexandre Meary, Corrado Barbui, Giuseppe Imperadore, Michele Tansella, Gary Sachs

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background Lithium carbonate and valproate semisodium are both recommended as monotherapy for prevention of relapse in bipolar disorder, but are not individually fully effective in many patients. If combination therapy with both agents is better than monotherapy, many relapses and consequent disability could be avoided. We aimed to establish whether lithium plus valproate was better than monotherapy with either drug alone for relapse prevention in bipolar I disorder. Methods 330 patients aged 16 years and older with bipolar I disorder from 41 sites in the UK, France, USA, and Italy were randomly allocated to open-label lithium monotherapy (plasma concentration 0.4-1.0 mmol/L, n=110), valproate monotherapy (750-1250 mg, n=110), or both agents in combination (n=110), after an active run-in of 4-8 weeks on the combination. Randomisation was by computer program, and investigators and participants were informed of treatment allocation. All outcome events were considered by the trial management team, who were masked to treatment assignment. Participants were followed up for up to 24 months. The primary outcome was initiation of new intervention for an emergent mood episode, which was compared between groups by Cox regression. Analysis was by intention to treat. This study is registered, number ISRCTN 55261332. Findings 59 (54%) of 110 people in the combination therapy group, 65 (59%) of 110 in the lithium group, and 76 (69%) of 110 in the valproate group had a primary outcome event during follow-up. Hazard ratios for the primary outcome were 0-59 (95% CI 0.42-0.83, p=0.0023) for combination therapy versus valproate, 0.82 (0.58-1.17, p=0.27) for combination therapy versus lithium, and 0.71 (0.51-1.00, p=0.0472) for lithium versus valproate. 16 participants had serious adverse events after randomisation: seven receiving valproate monotherapy (three deaths); five lithium monotherapy (two deaths); and four combination therapy (one death). Interpretation For people with bipolar I disorder, for whom long-term therapy is clinically indicated, both combination therapy with lithium plus valproate and lithium monotherapy are more likely to prevent relapse than is valproate monotherapy. This benefit seems to be irrespective of baseline severity of illness and is maintained for up to 2 years. BALANCE could neither reliably confirm nor refute a benefit of combination therapy compared with lithium monotherapy.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)385-395
Number of pages10
JournalThe Lancet
Volume375
Issue number9712
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2010

Keywords

  • Funding stanley medical research institute
  • Sanofi-Aventis

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