Frontiers in Psychiatry (Jun 2021)

The Greater Houston Area Bipolar Registry—Clinical and Neurobiological Trajectories of Children and Adolescents With Bipolar Disorders and High-Risk Unaffected Offspring

  • Alexandre Paim Diaz,
  • Alexandre Paim Diaz,
  • Valeria A. Cuellar,
  • Elizabeth L. Vinson,
  • Robert Suchting,
  • Kathryn Durkin,
  • Brisa S. Fernandes,
  • Brisa S. Fernandes,
  • Giselli Scaini,
  • Giselli Scaini,
  • Iram Kazimi,
  • Iram Kazimi,
  • Giovana B. Zunta-Soares,
  • João Quevedo,
  • João Quevedo,
  • João Quevedo,
  • João Quevedo,
  • Marsal Sanches,
  • Jair C. Soares,
  • Jair C. Soares

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2021.671840
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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The aims of this article are to discuss the rationale, design, and procedures of the Greater Houston Area Bipolar Registry (HBR), which aims at contributing to the effort involved in the investigation of neurobiological mechanisms underlying bipolar disorder (BD) as well as to identify clinical and neurobiological markers able to predict BD clinical course. The article will also briefly discuss examples of other initiatives that have made fundamental contributions to the field. This will be a longitudinal study with participants aged 6–17 at the time of enrollment. Participants will be required to meet diagnostic criteria for BD, or to be offspring of a parent with BD. We will also enroll healthy controls. Besides clinical information, which includes neurocognitive performance, participants will be asked to provide blood and saliva samples as well as to perform neuroimaging exams at baseline and follow-ups. Several studies point to the existence of genetic, inflammatory, and brain imaging alterations between individuals at higher genetic risk for BD compared with healthy controls. Longitudinal designs have shown high conversion rates to BD among high-risk offspring, with attempts to identify clinical predictors of disease onset, as well as clarifying the burden associated with environmental stressors. The HBR will help in the worldwide effort investigating the clinical course and neurobiological mechanisms of affected and high-risk children and adolescents with BD.

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