Volume 32, Issue 12 pp. 919-926
Research Article

EXPLORING PERSONALITY DIAGNOSIS STABILITY FOLLOWING ACUTE PSYCHOTHERAPY FOR CHRONIC POSTTRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER

John C. Markowitz M.D.

Corresponding Author

John C. Markowitz M.D.

New York State Psychiatric Institute and Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons, New York, New York

Correspondence to: John C. Markowitz, New York State Psychiatric Institute, 1051 Riverside Drive, Unit #129, New York, NY 10032. E-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
Eva Petkova Ph.D.

Eva Petkova Ph.D.

New York State Psychiatric Institute and Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons, New York, New York

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Tatyana Biyanova Ph.D.

Tatyana Biyanova Ph.D.

New York State Psychiatric Institute and Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons, New York, New York

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Ke Ding M.A.

Ke Ding M.A.

New York State Psychiatric Institute and Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons, New York, New York

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Eun Jung Suh Ph.D.

Eun Jung Suh Ph.D.

New York State Psychiatric Institute and Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons, New York, New York

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Yuval Neria Ph.D.

Yuval Neria Ph.D.

New York State Psychiatric Institute and Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons, New York, New York

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First published: 06 October 2015
Citations: 27

Trial Registry Name: clinicaltrials.gov

Registry identification number: NCT00739765

Contract grant sponsor: NIMH; Contract grant number: R01 MH079078.

Abstract

Background

Axis I comorbidity complicates diagnosing axis II personality disorders (PDs). PDs might influence Axis I outcome. No research has examined psychotherapy effects on PDs of treating Axis I comorbidity. Secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial examined PD diagnostic stability after brief psychotherapy of chronic posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

Methods

Patients with chronic PTSD were randomly assigned to 14 weeks of prolonged exposure, interpersonal psychotherapy, or relaxation therapy. Assessments included the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV, Patient Version (SCID-P) and Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis II Disorders (SCID-II) at baseline, week 14, and for treatment responders (≥30% clinician-administered PTSD scale improvement, defined a priori) at week 26 follow-up. We hypothesized patients whose PTSD improved would retain fewer baseline PD diagnoses posttreatment, particularly with personality traits PTSD mimics, e.g. paranoid and avoidant.

Results

Forty-seven (47%) of 99 SCID-II patients evaluated at baseline received a SCID-II diagnosis: paranoid (28%), obsessive–compulsive (27%), and avoidant (23%) PDs were most prevalent. Among 78 patients who repeated SCID-II evaluations posttreatment, 45% (N = 35) had baseline PD diagnoses, of which 43% (N = 15/35) lost at week 14. Three (7%) patients without baseline PDs acquired diagnoses at week 14; 10 others shifted diagnoses. Treatment modality and PTSD response were unrelated to PD improvement. Of treatment responders reevaluated at follow-up (N = 44), 56% with any baseline Axis II diagnosis had none at week 26.

Conclusion

This first evaluation of Axis I psychotherapy effects on personality disorder stability found that acutely treating a chronic state decreased apparent trait—across most PDs observed. These exploratory findings suggest personality diagnoses may have limited prognostic meaning in treating chronic PTSD.

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