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Article
Two-year stability and change of schizotypal, borderline, avoidant and obsessive-compulsive personality disorders
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (2004)
  • Carlos M. Grilo
  • M. Tracie Shea
  • Charles A. Sanislow
  • Andrew E. Skodol
  • John G. Gunderson, Harvard Medical School
  • Robert L. Stout
  • Maria E. Pagano
  • Shirley Yen
  • Leslie C. Morey, Texas A & M University - College Station
  • Mary C. Zanarini, Harvard Medical School
  • Thomas H. McGlashan
Abstract

he authors examined the stability of schizotypal (STPD), borderline (BPD), avoidant (AVPD) and obsessive-compulsive (OCPD) personality disorders (PDs) over 2 years of prospective multiwave follow-up. Six hundred thirty-three participants recruited at 4 collaborating sites who met criteria for 1 or more of the 4 PDs or for major depressive disorder (MOD) without PD were assessed with semistructured interviews at baseline, 6, 12, and 24 months. Lifetable survival analyses revealed that the PD groups had slower time to remission than the MDD group. Categorically, PD remission rates range from 50% (AVPD) to 61% (STPD) for dropping below diagnostic threshold on a blind 24-month reassessment but range from 23% (STPD) to 38% (OCPD) for a more stringent definition of improvement. Dimensionally, these findings suggest that PDs may be characterized by maladaptive trait constellations that are stable in their structure (individual differences) but can change in severity or expression over time.

Keywords
  • CLPS,
  • Collaborative Longitudinal Personality Study,
  • Stability,
  • Stability and Change,
  • Personality Disorders Stability,
  • DSM,
  • DSM-IV,
  • Axis I,
  • Axis II,
  • Personality Disorders,
  • Borderline,
  • Schizotypal,
  • Avoidant,
  • Obsessive-Compulsive
Publication Date
October, 2004
Citation Information
Grilo, C. M., Shea, M. T., Sanislow, C. A., Skodol, A. E., Gunderson, J. G., Stout, R. L., Pagano, M. E., Yen, S., Morey, L. C., Zanarini, M. C., & McGlashan, T. H. (2004). Two-year stability and change of schizotypal, borderline, avoidant and obsessive-compulsive personality disorders. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 72(5), 767-775.