Ps. Links et al., BORDERLINE PSYCHOPATHOLOGY AND RECURRENCES OF CLINICAL DISORDERS, The Journal of nervous and mental disease, 183(9), 1995, pp. 582-586
This prospective cohort study of patients with borderline psychopathol
ogy reports on the clinical disorders occurring during the course and
at 7-year follow-up. Subjects with persistent versus remitted borderli
ne personality disorder (BPD) are compared. The relationship between t
he initial levels of borderline psychopathology and the occurrence of
clinical disorders on follow-up is examined. Consecutive admissions to
inpatient units were screened for borderline characteristics. This re
sulted in a sample of 130 subjects, 88 of whom were positive for BPD b
ased on the Diagnostic Interview for Borderlines. At 7-year follow-up,
81 (62.3%) subjects were reinterviewed in person, 6 (4.6%) suicided,
2 (1.6%) were deceased, 36 (27.7%) refused to participate, and 5 (3.8%
) could not be located. Twenty-seven of 57 (47.4%) who initially were
positive for BPD were rediagnosed at 7-year follow-up (the persistent
group) and 30 (52.6%) were no longer diagnosed as BPD (the remitted gr
oup). The persistent individuals were significantly more likely to be
diagnosed as having major depression, dysthymia, and other psychiatric
disorders than the remitted group. The persistent group had significa
ntly more episodes of substance abuse over the follow-up period compar
ed with the remitted group. Individuals with persistent BPD suffered m
ore episodes of clinical disorders over the follow-up period and the i
nitial level of borderline psychopathology predicted the recurrence of
major depression.