Improving treatment outcomes for borderline personality disorder: what can we learn from biomarker studies of psychotherapy? : Current Opinion in Psychiatry

Secondary Logo

Journal Logo

PERSONALITY DISORDERS: Edited by Aleksandar Janca and Charles Pull

Improving treatment outcomes for borderline personality disorder: what can we learn from biomarker studies of psychotherapy?

Marceau, Ely M.a; Ruocco, Anthony C.b,c; Grenyer, Brin F.S.a

Author Information
Current Opinion in Psychiatry 36(1):p 67-74, January 2023. | DOI: 10.1097/YCO.0000000000000820

Abstract

Purpose of review 

Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a severe and common psychiatric disorder and though evidence-based psychotherapies are effective, rates of treatment nonresponse are as high as 50%. Treatment studies may benefit from interdisciplinary approaches from neuroscience and genetics research that could generate novel insights into treatment mechanisms and tailoring interventions to the individual.

Recent findings 

We provide a timely update to the small but growing body of literature investigating neurobiological and epigenetic changes and using biomarkers to predict outcomes from evidence-based psychotherapies for BPD. Using a rapid review methodology, we identified eight new studies, updating our earlier 2018 systematic review. Across all studies, neuroimaging (n = 18) and genetics studies (n = 4) provide data from 735 participants diagnosed with BPD (mean sample size across studies = 33.4, range 2–115).

Summary 

We report further evidence for psychotherapy-related alterations of neural activation and connectivity in regions and networks relating to executive control, emotion regulation, and self/interpersonal functioning in BPD. Emerging evidence also shows epigenetic changes following treatment. Future large-scale multisite studies may help to delineate multilevel treatment targets to inform intervention design, selection, and monitoring for the individual patient via integration of knowledge generated through clinical, neuroscience, and genetics research.

Copyright © 2022 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

You can read the full text of this article if you:

Access through Ovid