Adjunctive bright light therapy for treating bipolar depression: A systematic review and meta‐analysis of randomized controlled trials

Oct 9, 2020Brain and behavior

Bright light therapy added to treatment for bipolar depression: A review and combined analysis of controlled trials

AI simplified

Abstract

A total of 190 participants were evaluated, showing that light therapy significantly improved the for bipolar depression.

  • Light therapy resulted in a risk ratio of 1.78 for improving response rates in bipolar depression.
  • No significant effect of light therapy was found on the , with a risk ratio of 2.03.
  • The study included only randomized controlled trials to assess the efficacy of light therapy as an adjunctive treatment.
  • No serious adverse effects were reported in any of the included studies.
  • The manic switch rate was similar between the light therapy group (1.1%) and the control group (1.2%).

AI simplified

Key numbers

1.78
Increase in
Risk ratio for response rates in light therapy vs. control groups
2.03
No Significant Effect on
Risk ratio for remission rates in light therapy vs. control groups
13.8%
Dropout Rate
Dropout rate in the light therapy group

Full Text

What this is

  • Bright light therapy (BLT) is evaluated as an adjunctive treatment for bipolar depression.
  • This systematic review and meta-analysis focused on randomized controlled trials (RCTs) to clarify BLT's efficacy.
  • The analysis included four RCTs with a total of 190 participants.
  • Findings indicate that BLT significantly improves response rates but not remission rates in bipolar depression.

Essence

  • Bright light therapy significantly increases response rates in bipolar depression patients but does not improve remission rates.

Key takeaways

  • BLT resulted in a risk ratio of 1.78 for response rates, indicating a significant effect compared to control groups.
  • No significant effect was found for remission rates, with a risk ratio of 2.03, suggesting variability in outcomes.
  • The dropout rate for BLT was 13.8%, showing it is well-tolerated with no serious adverse effects reported.

Caveats

  • The analysis included only four studies, limiting the generalizability of the findings.
  • Variability in light treatment strategies and small sample sizes may affect the robustness of the results.

Definitions

  • response rate: Percentage of patients achieving a predefined reduction in depression severity.
  • remission rate: Percentage of patients whose depression symptoms fall below a specified threshold.

AI simplified

what lands in your inbox each week:

  • 📚7 fresh studies
  • 📝plain-language summaries
  • direct links to original studies
  • 🏅top journal indicators
  • 📅weekly delivery
  • 🧘‍♂️always free