TY - JOUR
T1 - Familial Rates of Affective Disorder
T2 - A Report From the National Institute of Mental Health Collaborative Study
AU - Andreasen, Nancy C.
AU - Rice, John
AU - Endicott, Jean
AU - Coryell, William
AU - Grove, William M.
AU - Reich, Theodore
PY - 1987/5
Y1 - 1987/5
N2 - We examined familial rates of affective disorder and related illness in a cohort of 955 probands studied at five centers in the National Institute of Mental Health Collaborative Study of the Psychobiology of Depression: Boston, Chicago, Iowa City, New York, and St Louis. Six hundred sixteen of these probands were entered into a family study, and 3423 of their first-degree relatives were evaluated. The probands were divided into five diagnostic groups: schizoaffective-bipolar (n = 37), schizoaffective-depressed (n =18), bipolar I (n =151), bipolar II (n = 76), and unipolar (n = 330). The relatives of bipolar I probands had a higher rate of bipolar I illness than the relatives of unipolar probands, but the relatives of unipolar probands did not have a higher rate of unipolar illness than the relatives of bipolar I probands. The relatives of probands with schizoaffective disorder, depressed subtype, had a higher rate of schizophrenia than the relatives of schizoaffective-bipolar probands, suggesting that bipolar schizoaffective disorder may be closer to pure affective disorder while schizoaffective depression may be closer to schizophrenia. An increase in bipolar II illness was also observed in the relatives of bipolar II probands. Overall, these data support the widely accepted distinction between bipolar and unipolar affective disorders.
AB - We examined familial rates of affective disorder and related illness in a cohort of 955 probands studied at five centers in the National Institute of Mental Health Collaborative Study of the Psychobiology of Depression: Boston, Chicago, Iowa City, New York, and St Louis. Six hundred sixteen of these probands were entered into a family study, and 3423 of their first-degree relatives were evaluated. The probands were divided into five diagnostic groups: schizoaffective-bipolar (n = 37), schizoaffective-depressed (n =18), bipolar I (n =151), bipolar II (n = 76), and unipolar (n = 330). The relatives of bipolar I probands had a higher rate of bipolar I illness than the relatives of unipolar probands, but the relatives of unipolar probands did not have a higher rate of unipolar illness than the relatives of bipolar I probands. The relatives of probands with schizoaffective disorder, depressed subtype, had a higher rate of schizophrenia than the relatives of schizoaffective-bipolar probands, suggesting that bipolar schizoaffective disorder may be closer to pure affective disorder while schizoaffective depression may be closer to schizophrenia. An increase in bipolar II illness was also observed in the relatives of bipolar II probands. Overall, these data support the widely accepted distinction between bipolar and unipolar affective disorders.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0023183294&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1001/archpsyc.1987.01800170083011
DO - 10.1001/archpsyc.1987.01800170083011
M3 - Article
C2 - 3579497
AN - SCOPUS:0023183294
SN - 0003-990X
VL - 44
SP - 461
EP - 469
JO - Archives of General Psychiatry
JF - Archives of General Psychiatry
IS - 5
ER -