From the Journals

Borderline personality disorder: Is there an optimal therapy?


 

Combining individual schema and group schema therapy together appears to be the best approach for reducing symptoms of borderline personality disorder (BPD), new research suggests.

Schema is a form of psychotherapy that focuses on experiential approaches rather than on behavior change.

Dr. Arnoud Arntz, Department of Clinical Psychology, University of Amsterdam Courtesy University of Amsterdam

Dr. Arnoud Arntz

The findings from an international randomized controlled trial underscore the importance of offering both individual and group approaches to patients with BPD, study investigator Arnoud Arntz, PhD, professor in the department of clinical psychology at the University of Amsterdam, told this news organization.

“In the Netherlands, there’s a big push from mental health institutes to deliver treatments in group therapy [only] because people think it’s more cost-effective; but these findings question that idea,” Dr. Arntz said.

The findings were published online March 2 in JAMA Psychiatry.

Early childhood experiences

Patients with BPD exhibit extreme sensitivity to interpersonal slights, intense and volatile emotions, and impulsive behaviors. Many abuse drugs, self-harm, or attempt suicide.

Evidence-based guidelines recommend psychotherapy as the primary treatment for BPD.

Schema therapy uses techniques from traditional psychotherapy but focuses on an experiential strategy. It also delves into early childhood experiences, which is relevant because patients with BPD often experienced abuse or neglect early in life.

As well, with this approach, therapists take on a sort of parenting role with patients to try to meet needs “that were frustrated in childhood,” said Dr. Arntz.

Previous research has suggested both individual and group schema therapy help reduce BPD symptoms, but the effectiveness of combining these two approaches has been unclear.

The current study included 495 adult patients (mean age, 33.6 years; 86.2% women) enrolled at 15 sites in five countries: the Netherlands, England, Greece, Germany, and Australia. All participants had a Borderline Personality Disorder Severity Index IV (BPDSI-IV) score of more than 20.

The BPDSI-IV score ranges from 0 to 90, with a score of 15 being the cutoff for a BPD diagnosis.

Investigators randomly assigned participants to one of three arms: predominantly group schema therapy, combined individual and group schema therapy, and treatment as usual – which was the optimal psychological treatment available at the site.

The two schema therapy arms, whether group or individual, involved a similar number of sessions each week. However, the frequency was gradually reduced over the course of the study.

Improved severity

The primary outcome was change in BPD severity as assessed at baseline, 6 months, 12 months, 18 months, 24 months, and 36 months with the BPDSI-IV total score.

Researchers first compared both the group therapy and the combination therapy with treatment as usual and found that together, the two schema arms were superior for reducing total BPDSI-IV score, with a medium to large effect size (Cohen d, 0.73; 95% confidence interval, .29-1.18; P = .001).

The difference was significant at 1.5 years (mean difference, 2.38; 95% CI, .27-4.49; P = .03).

When the treatment arms were compared separately, the combination therapy was superior to both the group therapy (Cohen d, 0.84; 95% CI, .09-1.59; P = .03) and to treatment as usual (Cohen d, 1.14; 95% CI, .57-1.71; P < .001).

The effectiveness of the predominantly group therapy did not differ significantly from that of treatment as usual.

The difference in effectiveness of combined therapy compared with treatment as usual became significant at 1 year. It became significant at 2.5 years compared with predominantly group therapy.

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