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Sensitivity to light in bipolar disorder: implications for research and clinical practice

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 January 2024

Amber Roguski*
Affiliation:
Division of Psychiatry, University of Edinburgh, UK; and Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences, University of Edinburgh, UK
Philipp Ritter
Affiliation:
Clinic for Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Carl Gustav Carus University Hospital, Technical University of Dresden, Germany
Daniel J. Smith
Affiliation:
Division of Psychiatry, University of Edinburgh, UK; and Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences, University of Edinburgh, UK
*
Correspondence: Amber Roguski. Email: amber.roguski@ed.ac.uk
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Abstract

Circadian dysfunction is a core feature of bipolar disorder and may be due, at least in part, to abnormalities of non-visual photoreception. We critically review the evidence for light hypersensitivity in bipolar disorder and discuss how this may shape future research and clinical innovation, with a focus on a possible novel mechanism of action for lithium.

Type
BJPsych Editorial
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Royal College of Psychiatrists

Circadian dyregulation is a core feature of bipolar disorder

For individuals with bipolar disorder – particularly those living at more extreme latitudes – episodes of mania and depression exhibit a sensitivity to seasonal patterns of light exposure. Analyses of hospital admission records demonstrate peaks for mania during spring/summer, coinciding with longer day length (photoperiods) and peaks for depression in winter when daylight is more limited. Mania and depression admissions increase particularly around the spring and autumn equinoxes, respectively, when day-to-day changes in photoperiod length are most rapid. Interestingly, these trends appear to be strongest for women, suggesting a possible gender difference in photoperiod sensitivity.

Seasonal variation in symptoms may provide a key mechanistic insight for circadian disruption in bipolar disorder: namely, that changes in light exposure levels can disrupt circadian rhythms and destabilise the euthymic mood state. According to this ‘light hypersensitivity hypothesis’, people with bipolar disorder may have some pathophysiological vulnerability that makes them more susceptible to the destabilising effects of excess light at night and rapid daily changes in photoperiod length. Indirect clinical evidence supporting light hypersensitivity in bipolar disorder comes from the recognised efficacy of chronotherapies such as bright-light therapy for bipolar depression and blue-light blocking glasses (or ‘dark therapies’) for mania.Reference Gottlieb, Benedetti, Geoffroy, Henriksen, Lam and Murray1

Light hypersensitivity may be enriched in bipolar disorder

Between the 1980s and early 2000s, several studies investigated light sensitivity in bipolar disorder by assessing in vivo light-induced melatonin suppression (for review see Swope et alReference Swope, Rong, Campanella, Vaicekonyte, Phillips and Cain2). Guided by observations that melatonin levels may be elevated during mania and decreased during bipolar depressive episodes, initial investigations of light sensitivity by Lewy et alReference Lewy, Wehr, Goodwin, Newsome and Rosenthal3 assessed small numbers of people with bipolar disorder during extreme mood states (for example, two patients with mania and two with bipolar depression)Reference Swope, Rong, Campanella, Vaicekonyte, Phillips and Cain2 (see Table 1). This small study reported 50% suppression of melatonin when participants with bipolar disorder were exposed to 500 lux (compared to minimal suppression in a control group). Increasing light intensity to 1500 lux almost completely suppressed melatonin levels in the bipolar disorder group, compared with only 60% suppression in the control group. These melatonin suppression experiments were subsequently extended to euthymic bipolar disorder, with several research groups reporting overall increased melatonin suppression in response to night-time light stimulationReference Swope, Rong, Campanella, Vaicekonyte, Phillips and Cain2 (Table 1).

Table 1 Summary of melatonin suppression studies in bipolar disorder

BD-I, bipolar disorder type I; BD-II, bipolar disorder type II.

a. Data are s.d. for Whalley et al.Reference Whalley, Perini, Shering and Bennie10

b. Ritter et alReference Ritter, Wieland, Skene, Pfennig, Weiss and Bauer5 used photon density (1.6 × 1013 photons/cm2/s) as a measure of photic stimulation.

Conversely, several groups have reported that control participants may have either greater or comparable levels of melatonin suppression to those of participants with bipolar disorder.Reference Swope, Rong, Campanella, Vaicekonyte, Phillips and Cain2 In one study by Nurnberger et al,Reference Nurnberger, Adkins, Lahiri, Mayeda, Hu and Lewy4 this null result became positive when the bipolar disorder group was stratified into type I (BD-I) and type II (BD-II): individuals with BD-I exhibited greater melatonin suppression than BD-II and control participants. Additionally, participants with bipolar disorder not taking medication had the greatest melatonin suppression. The largest and most well-controlled study to date by Ritter and colleaguesReference Ritter, Wieland, Skene, Pfennig, Weiss and Bauer5 used a well-defined BD-I cohort and found no evidence for light hypersensitivity or elevated melatonin suppression compared with that in control participants.Reference Swope, Rong, Campanella, Vaicekonyte, Phillips and Cain2

These contradictory results raise several important issues. First, the within-group variation of melatonin suppression in these studies demonstrates that light sensitivity is not uniform. Indeed, we now know that sensitivity to light is influenced by age, gender, genetic variability, eye colour and pupil size, as well as by environmental factors such as prior light exposure. These factors mean that light hypersensitivity is enriched in certain demographic, at-risk, and disease populations. For example, increased sensitivity to light (and elevated melatonin suppression) has been reported in younger age groups and in delayed sleep–wake phase disorder, and some studies suggest that people with unipolar depression may have reduced sensitivity to light.Reference Swope, Rong, Campanella, Vaicekonyte, Phillips and Cain2 This variability may also apply to subtypes of bipolar disorder: melatonin suppression may be greater in BD-I than in BD-II (but, as noted above, the only study to assess this so far had a very small sample size).

Another limitation of previous bipolar disorder light hypersensitivity investigations is the lack of in-depth phenotypic characterisation of study participants. For example, several studies were conducted prior to DSM-IV (1994), before BD-II was introduced and specific inclusion/exclusion criteria or diagnostic definitions were often not provided. It is also not clear whether the broad clinical spectrum of bipolar disorder (from bipolar disorder – not otherwise specified to BD-II and BD-I) directly parallels a light sensitivity spectrum, or if other confounding factors (such as age, gender and medication) contribute to differences in light sensitivity between BD-I and BD-II. To date there has been no study that compares control participants with distinct BD-I and BD-II groups.

The evidence supporting light hypersensitivity in bipolar disorder therefore comes from a relatively limited number of small studies. Discrepancies between studies may be explained by confounding factors such as light delivery timing, differences in spectral composition, medication status, differences in pupillary diameter, bipolar disorder diagnostic heterogeneity and individual differences in light sensitivity. One important factor that no studies have adjusted for (including those by Ritter et alReference Ritter, Wieland, Skene, Pfennig, Weiss and Bauer5) is individual differences in circadian phase. As people with bipolar disorder often exhibit a delayed circadian phase, delivery of the light stimulus at the same time for all participants is likely to be a serious confound. Future experiments should therefore adjust the timing of light stimuli delivery according to an individual's circadian phase.

It is also important to note that most investigations into light hypersensitivity were conducted prior to the discovery (in 1998) of melanopsin-containing intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (ipRGC), which are the main conduit for non-visual/circadian light effects. These studies therefore lacked a key piece of mechanistic information, which might have informed study design decisions and the interpretation of findings.

Locating light hypersensitivity pathology in the retinohypothalamic tract

Clearly more research on light sensitivity in bipolar disorder (and potential links to mechanisms of relapse) is warranted. Objective markers of light hypersensitivity to assess in future work would include: functional and structural changes in the retino–hypothalamic–pineal pathway; changes in melatonin levels; changes to behaviour; and changes in mood or activity symptoms in response to light stimuli. The success of light- and dark-chronotherapies – as well as experimental evidence that melatonin suppression recovery does not differ between bipolar disorder and control groupsReference Swope, Rong, Campanella, Vaicekonyte, Phillips and Cain2 – suggests that pathways that are downstream from the suprachiasmatic nucleus for melatonin synthesis are intact and sufficient for entraining circadian rhythms, and that light is in itself capable of influencing mood states.

Some evidence therefore points to photic stimulation as a putative trigger for changes in circadian markers (including, but not limited to, melatonin secretion). A logical next step is to plan investigations at the level of the retina and, specifically, to study ipRGCs. There have been no cellular studies of ipRGC function in bipolar disorder so far. However, retinal imaging has identified that people with bipolar disorder may have decreased thickness of retinal nerve fibre and ganglion cell layers. Furthermore, psychophysical testing has found colour vision abnormalities in people with bipolar disorder. Retinal pathology may therefore be a key (but previously unrecognised) feature of bipolar disorder, and light hypersensitivity occurring via ipRGC dysfunction is feasible and testable.

Taking this a step further, some kind of pathological change to retinal structure and/or function could result in a vulnerability to changes in both visual and non-visual responses. One consequence of this is could be supersensitivity to blue light at night and increased susceptibility to circadian phase shifts (as demonstrated by Ritter et alReference Ritter, Soltmann, Sauer, Yakac, Boekstaegers and Reichard11) caused by natural or synthetic light stimuli that are out-of-sync with the external environment. These phase shifts could lead to misalignment of internal and external clocks and disrupted daily rhythms of sleep, neuroplasticity, activity, metabolism and immune function. The adverse effects of these changes (such as sleep fragmentation and sleep deprivation) could then cause individuals to relapse into mania or depression. Importantly for this tentative hypothesis, circadian dysfunction in bipolar disorder is posited as a downstream consequence of retinal pathology.

A potential mechanism of action for lithium

If light hypersensitivity is a true biomarker of bipolar disorder (even within a subgroup) then the implications for understanding current treatments and for developing new therapies could be substantial. Lithium is a gold-standard treatment for bipolar disorder but it is not effective for at least one-third of patients, suggesting the existence of subgroups with ‘lithium-responsive’ and ‘lithium non-responsive’ bipolar disorder. Although lithium's mechanism of action is unclear, good evidence indicates that it regulates neurotransmission and has neuroprotective effects by reducing neural excitotoxicity. It is also known that lithium has a dose-dependent effect on the circadian period length and can stabilise internal free-running period length, as well as delaying the sleep phase. We would add that lithium may also be effective (at least in some patients) by correcting retinal hypersensitivity to light at night.

The plausibility of retinal effects of lithium is supported by human magnetic resonance imaging research that shows that lithium accumulates within the eyes.Reference Smith, Thelwall, Necus, Flowers, Blamire and Cousins12 Early animal studies demonstrated that lithium stabilised circadian rhythms by reducing light-induced phase delays and that it influenced pupillary response to light (but not dark).Reference Seggie, Steiner, Wright and Orpen13 Thus, it is likely that lithium acts by modulating the retinal response to light rather than modulating pupillary muscle tone. In healthy human participants, 5 days of lithium therapy reversed the effects of light-induced melatonin suppression.Reference Hallam, Olver, Horgan, McGrath and Norman14 One study using electrooculography and electroretinography found no retinal electrophysiological differences in response to light between participants with bipolar disorder on long-term lithium therapy and controls.Reference Lam, Allain, Sullivan, Beattie, Remick and Zis15 Although the authors concluded that light sensitivity was not a feature of bipolar disorder and that lithium did not reduce light hypersensitivity, in fact the opposite may be true. It is theoretically possible that the long-term lithium treatment of the participants with bipolar disorder (mean 7 years) may have restored light sensitivity levels to that of the control participants.

Overall, these studies tentatively support a mechanism of action for lithium that reduces light hypersensitivity. There have been no attempts to date to classify people with bipolar disorder according to light sensitivity levels. Additionally, research now needs to establish how light sensitivity changes across different bipolar mood states. To do so could be a first step towards providing treatments that specifically target light hypersensitivity subgroups, with flexibility to account for dynamic, mood-dependent light sensitivity profiles.

If people with bipolar disorder can indeed be stratified according to light sensitivity, research investigating the mechanisms of action of different therapies within these subgroups could move forward. Longer term, this stratification approach could inform personalised medicine (and specific chronotherapeutic) approaches to treating bipolar disorder.

As a clinical and research community, we need to communicate more clearly to patients and their families that chronotherapies are useful and feasible and we need to work with patients to produce high-quality accessible bipolar-specific information on light, circadian disruption, sleep and rest/activity rhythms.

Conclusion

Converging evidence from basic science and from clinical practice suggests that light hypersensitivity may be a biomarker of risk for relapse, at least in a subgroup of patients with bipolar disorder. A light hypersensitivity perspective of bipolar disorder is an exciting focus for future research. It confers challenges for both patients and clinicians but also new opportunities for patient stratification and treatment innovation.

Author contribution

A.R. was responsible for conceptualisation and writing (original draft, review and editing); P.R. was responsible for writing (review and editing); and D.J.S. was responsible for conceptualisation and writing (original draft, review and editing).

Funding

This work was supported by the Wellcome Trust (226787/2/22/Z).

Declaration of interest

None.

References

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Figure 0

Table 1 Summary of melatonin suppression studies in bipolar disorder

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