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Depression and borderline personality disorder

Josephine A Beatson and Sathya Rao
Med J Aust 2013; 199 (6): S24-S27. || doi: 10.5694/mja12.10474
Published online: 29 October 2013

This is a republished version of an article previously published in MJA Open

BPD is not a variant of affective disorder

Given the prominent overlap of symptoms between BPD and affective disorders, it has been suggested that BPD is a variant of affective disorder — either depressive disorder or bipolar disorder.3,4 However, the consensus of expert opinion is that BPD is not a variant of either MDD or bipolar disorder,5-12 although overlap of symptoms of both disorders can occur with BPD.

The most significant evidence that BPD is not a variant of depressive disorder is that treatment of depression does not result in remission of BPD symptoms. An important longitudinal study found that effective treatment of BPD tends to result in remission of depression, and antidepressants often show only modest benefit for depressive disorders that co-occur with BPD.6

A 2010 review of phenotype, endophenotype and genotype comparisons between BPD and MDD found that BPD differs from MDD in symptomatology, prognosis, heritability, patterns of brain region involvement, neurohormonal indices and sleep architecture.7 Some biological processes overlapped, including amygdala hyperreactivity, volume changes in the anterior cingulate cortex, and deficient serotonin function. The authors noted that definitive clarification of the commonalities and differences between BPD and MDD requires examination of both disorders using the same study design and methodology.

A study of depressive symptoms and BPD features in dysthymic disorder showed that a common factor underlying both disorders best explained the frequency of their co-occurrence, providing an excellent fit with the data.13 The authors postulated that the underlying factors were shared genetic, temperamental, or early environmental risk factors.

It is known that factors in the early environment, including those that lead to insecure and pathological patterns of attachment, combined in some cases with an anxious, sensitive temperament and later childhood trauma, predispose to both BPD and early-onset dysthymic disorder and depression.14 It may be that some of these factors also predispose to rapid-cycling bipolar disorder.

Family studies show that, while MDD and bipolar disorders commonly co-occur with BPD, impulsive spectrum disorders are more common than affective spectrum disorders in BPD-affected families.10,11 Studies have also shown that depressed patients with BPD do not significantly differ from those without BPD in terms of morbid risk for bipolar disorder in first-degree relatives.10,11 Importantly, treatment with mood-regulating agents does not produce remission from BPD.10

A recent review examining the similarities and differences between bipolar affective disorder and BPD concluded that they are separate entities but have significant elements in common.12 The many differences between them included those relating to sense of self, relationship disruptions, family history of bipolar disorders, benefits of medication, and the form of affective dysregulation.

Another recent review of the overlap between bipolar disorder and BPD found the greatest overlap occurred in relation to rapid-cycling bipolar disorder.15 Frequent shifts of mood characterised both BPD and rapid-cycling bipolar disorder, as did a history of childhood trauma including sexual, physical and emotional abuse, and neglect. Maladaptive self-schemas of the “I am bad” type were much more characteristic of BPD, as was vulnerability to abandonment. The review’s authors question whether rapid-cycling bipolar disorder is a form of BPD or represents bipolar disorder with co-occurring BPD traits.

Clearly, there are unanswered questions about the reasons for the frequent co-occurrence of affective disorders and BPD, which can only be resolved by further research.

Psychotropic medication for MDD co-occurring with BPD

We are aware of no research specifically examining medication for major depression co-occurring with BPD. The consensus of informed opinion over many years has been that depression co-occurring with BPD does not respond as well to antidepressant medication as depression in the absence of BPD.5,21 In addition, there is evidence that the time to remission tends to be longer and recurrence of depression more likely when BPD and MDD co-occur.22 A meta-analysis of the outcome of depression co-occurring with personality disorders in general similarly concluded that: “Combined depression and personality disorder is associated with a poorer outcome than depression alone”.23 The percentage of patients with BPD in the sample included in this analysis was not stated.

However, not all authorities agree that depression co-occurring with BPD responds poorly to antidepressant treatment.24,25 A 2002 review found that whether or not personality disorder worsened treatment outcome depended on the study design — the best-designed studies reported the least effect of personality disorder on the outcome of treatment for depression.25 Individual personality disorders were not examined separately. High neuroticism scores were found to be predictive of poor prognosis, particularly when long-term outcome was taken into account. High neuroticism scores are characteristic of BPD,26 and relapse of depression tends to be earlier and time of remission shorter in BPD,22 suggesting that patients with BPD and co-occurring depression may fall in the group identified in this review as responding poorly to treatment for depression.

We agree that vigorous treatment of depression is required when it co-occurs with BPD,25 to ensure the best possible outcome for the patient, but believe that this must be combined with treatment for the co-occurring BPD. In the absence of adequate data, clinicians should consider treating MDD associated with BPD with biological treatments (antidepressants), as they would treat MDD without BPD. However, without BPD-specific psychotherapy, MDD that is associated with BPD may not respond adequately to biological treatments — but BPD-specific psychotherapy does help treat both MDD and BPD when the disorders co-occur.

There is some limited evidence for the use of aripiprazole, olanzapine and omega-3 fatty acids in the management of depressive symptoms of BPD,21 but there are no data to guide clinicians in choosing a specific biological treatment for MDD that co-occurs with BPD. Lithium has not been shown to be particularly effective in treating MDD that co-occurs with BPD. Clinicians may need to exercise caution in prescribing lithium for patients with BPD and MDD, given the significant risk (about 25%) of self-harm through overdose of prescription medication in patients with BPD.27

Rigorous research examining the treatment response of patients with BPD and co-occurring depression is clearly required and should include patients with severe forms of BPD, who are likely to be among those responding most poorly to treatment for co-occurring depression.

Polypharmacy and BPD

There is increasing pressure worldwide to limit the use of medication for BPD because of its limited effectiveness and concerns about the obesity-related health problems that can occur, particularly with polypharmacy.21 Guidelines published by the United Kingdom’s National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence in 2010 go so far as to state that drug treatment should not be used for individual symptoms or behaviour associated with BPD,28 whereas the latest Cochrane review states that pharmacotherapy should be targeted at specific symptoms only.29 Both guidelines acknowledge the possible benefit of medication when depression and BPD co-occur, while stressing that a diagnosis of depression should be reviewed when it has been made in the context of a crisis in the patient’s life.

Unfortunately, polypharmacy is commonly seen in patients with BPD, with or without co-occurring depression. It tends to occur because the patient’s distress is of such intensity that clinicians feel driven to try to alleviate it, by whatever means are available. Such means often include increased doses of medication or additional medications. The ensuing danger is that patients with BPD may be prescribed one psychotropic agent after another, sometimes in high doses, with none of the earlier prescriptions ceased. One study found that, compared with people with major depression alone, people with BPD were twice as likely to have received anti-anxiety medication, more than six times as likely to have received mood stabilisers, more than 10 times as likely to have used antipsychotics, and twice as likely to have taken antidepressants.30

All available evidence points to the fact that medication should be targeted at specific symptoms of BPD and used only when these are severe, and that medications should be reviewed on a regular basis.21,28,29

Electroconvulsive therapy for MDD co-occurring with BPD

There is little evidence that electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is beneficial for treating depression in patients with BPD.21 There are no randomised controlled trials of its use, and studies have in general been poorly designed. A 2004 study employing improved methodology continued to show a poorer acute response to ECT for depression co-occurring with BPD.31 However, if patients with BPD have severe depression that would otherwise warrant ECT, they should not be excluded from consideration of this intervention simply on the basis of having BPD.

Prioritising psychosocial treatment for BPD co-occurring with MDD

The principal treatment for BPD is psychosocial — that is, some form of psychotherapy, which may be combined with psychotropic medication aimed at specific symptoms.32,33

One study showed that MDD is not a significant predictor of outcome for BPD, but BPD is a significant predictor of outcome for MDD.6 This finding led the study authors to recommend that treatment of BPD with psychotherapy should take priority when BPD co-occurs with depression, as once the BPD abates, so will the depression.6

Several modalities of psychotherapy for BPD, including dialectical behaviour therapy, mentalisation-based treatment, transference-focused therapy, schema-focused therapy and supportive psychotherapy, have been shown in randomised controlled trials to result in lowered levels of depression.33 It is unclear whether the depression referred to in these studies is part of an MDE co-occurring with the BPD or the depressive symptoms so often seen in BPD. These psychotherapies share some common features that are applicable across all treatment settings where patients with BPD are likely to present, including primary care (Box 2). There is no doubt that interactions with patients with BPD that lack these core features will worsen their distress and can lead to increasingly maladaptive (including self-harming) behaviour.

It is significant that those psychotherapies that have proven useful for the treatment of depression alone — cognitive behaviour therapy, mindfulness-based approaches, and interpersonal therapy, among others — all focus on promoting the patient’s capacity to reflect on his or her own mind and that of others (ie, to “mentalise”).34 In some cases, a lowered rate of relapse of depression after psychotherapy has been shown. This lower relapse rate is likely to result from the patient’s new-found ability to reflect on the thoughts, feelings and behaviour associated with, or leading to, depression.34

Conclusions

We suggest taking a therapeutic stance to MDD co-occurring with BPD that promotes reflection on the patient’s mind and the minds of others, using a psychological approach such as cognitive behaviour therapy, mindfulness, interpersonal psychotherapy or mentalisation-based treatment. Such reflection can, over time, limit the repetition of the maladaptive ways of thinking, interacting and behaving that lead to depression and depressive symptoms in patients with BPD. This approach, combined with the features common to effective therapies for BPD shown in Box 2, will help patients to understand themselves and others better, and can lead to lasting change, including less depression.

Medication for MDE, when it co-occurs with BPD, should be prescribed with careful attention to the dangers of polypharmacy and in the knowledge that medication is not the primary treatment for BPD. Leading authorities stress that medication for depression co-occurring with BPD will not lead to remission of the personality disorder,6,21 which requires treatment in its own right.


Provenance: Commissioned by supplement editors; externally peer reviewed.

  • Josephine A Beatson1
  • Sathya Rao2

  • Spectrum, The Personality Disorder Service for Victoria, Melbourne, VIC.


Correspondence: jobeatson@ozemail.com.au

Competing interests:

No relevant disclosures.

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