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Is BORDERLINE PATHOLOGY a FOCUS FOR SPECIFIC TREATMENT APPROACHES

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Title: Is BORDERLINE PATHOLOGY a FOCUS FOR SPECIFIC TREATMENT APPROACHES


1
Is BORDERLINE PATHOLOGY a FOCUS FOR SPECIFIC
TREATMENT APPROACHES?
  • John F. Clarkin, Ph.D.
  • Weill Medical College of Cornell University

2
Personality Disorder Institute
  • Psychoanalysts/Expert Clinicians
  • O. KERNBERG M. STONE
  • E. CALIGOR F. YEOMANS
  • Psychotherapy Researchers
  • J. CLARKIN M. LENZENWEGER
  • K. LEVY
  • Neurocognitive Scientists
  • M. POSNER D. SILBERSWEIG

3
My Own Experience and Bias
  • Researcher bipolar disorder and borderline
    personality disorder
  • Clinician
  • Therapists approaches to specific patient
    pathologies
  • Psychotherapy research has focused too much on
    therapy orientations, with little attention to
    the specifics of the pathology
  • The therapist is as important as the treatment
    orientation

4
Agenda
  • Disorder specific psychotherapy One treatment
    approach does not fit all
  • Nature of borderline pathology
  • Observable interpersonal behavior
  • Internal representations of self and others
  • Cognitive and emotional functions
  • Common features of empirically supported,
    modified treatment approaches to borderline
    pathology
  • The TFP approach to borderline pathology
  • Summary and conclusions

5
Treatment Modifications for BPD
  • Both cognitive-behavioral and psychodynamic
    therapists see the need to modify treatment for
    borderline pathology
  • DBT is a specific cognitive-behavioral treatment
    for borderline pathology effective as compared
    to TAU (Linehan, et al, 1991)
  • Mentalization Based Treatment (MBT) and
    Transference Focused Psychotherapy (TFP) are
    modifications of dynamic treatments for BPD both
    are effective (Bateman Fonagy, 1999 Clarkin et
    al, 2007)

6
WHAT IS THE NATURE OF BORDERLINE PATHOLOGY?
  • Self-destructive behaviors
  • Negative affect combined with low constraint
  • Relations with others that are constricted or
    conflicted (hyperactivating or deactivating)
  • Internal representations (working models) of self
    and others that are extreme, distorted, marred by
    past experiences

7
Growing Consensus About Personality Disorders
  • Conception of self and others
  • Interpersonal behavior
  • Livesley, 2000 Pincus, 2005

8
Key Constructs in Models of Personality Disorder
(Lenzenweger Clarkin, 2005)
  • Disturbed internal working models (Bowlby, 1979)
  • Maladaptive schemas (Beck et al., 2004)
  • Limited and incoherent conception of self and
    others (Identity diffusion) (Kernberg Caligor,
    2005)
  • Disturbed Attachment (Meyer Pilkonis, 2005)
    leading to disturbed cognitive-affective
    motivational patterns (representational systems
    of self and others, goals and strategies to
    pursue them)
  • Conceptions of self in interaction copied from
    past (Benjamin, 2005)

9
Elements of Interpersonal Functioning
10
1. Observable Interpersonal Behavior
  • Work and marital status
  • Ratings of quality of love relations and work
    performance

11
Rating of Love Relations
  • 1. Absence of sexual/romantic relations
  • 2. Brief relations, conflict, devoid of sexual
    contact
  • 3. Brief sexual contacts without romance
  • 4. Sexual contacts sensual without romance
  • 5. Sexual contact with one partner without
    romantic feelings
  • 6. Romantic involvement with one partner, no
    sexual involvement
  • 7. Satisfying sexual romantic involvement with
    one partner

12
Rating of Work
  • 1. No voluntary or paid work
  • 2. Some volunteer work
  • 3. Part-time volunteer or paid work
  • 4. Part time work, not commensurate with
    education
  • 5. Full time work not commensurate with
    education, no absences
  • 6. Effective full time work, not commensurate
    with education
  • 7. Full time work, commensurate with education,
    works up to potential

13
Percentage of Patients Involvement in
Relationships and Work
14
2. Internal Representations Self-Report
Attachment Patterns (ECR) (Hazan Shaver, 1987)
  • Secure It is relatively easy to get close to
    others I am comfortable depending on them and
    having them depend on me. I dont worry about
    being abandoned or someone getting too close.
  • Avoidant I am uncomfortable being close to
    others it is difficult to trust others and to
    depend upon them
  • Anxious I find others reluctant to get as close
    as I would like I worry that my partner doesnt
    really love me or wont want to stay with me.

15
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16
Internal Representations BPD Attachment Patterns
(Levy et al, 2006)
17
3. Cognitive/emotional Functions
  • Effortful control
  • Neurocognitive functioning in processing negative
    affect

18
Neurocognitive FunctioningFunctioning
  • Lab tests of effortful executive functioning BPD
    and controls differed significantly on WCST
    perseverative responses, of perseverative
    errors, and errors (Lenzenweger, Clarkin,
    Fertuck, Kernberg, 2004)
  • fMRI tests of inhibition under the influence of
    negative affect emotional linguistic go/no go
    task (Silbersweig, Clarkin, Goldstein, Kernberg,
    et al, 2007)

19
Emotional Stroop Task
20
Behavioral Results
  • Patients rated negative words more negative
  • Longer reaction times for patients during no-go
    blocks
  • Greater errors of omission for patients during
    no-go and negative no-go
  • Greater errors of commission for patients under
    negative no-go condition

21
Neuroimaging Results
  • Behavioral inhibition and negative emotion
    Patients manifested decreased ventromedial
    prefrontal (medial orbitofrontal, subgenal
    anterior cingulate) activity
  • Behavioral inhibition and negative emotion
  • Patients manifested decreasing vetromedial
    prefrontal increasing extended
    amygdalar-ventral striatal activities
  • These activites signficantly correlated with
    trait measures (MPQ) of decreased constraint and
    increased negative emotion

22
Discussion
  • OFC lesions/dysfunction associated clinically
    with socio-emotional dyscontrol
  • In BPD, a bias toward intense negative feelings
    may dominate the process coupled with failure of
    top-down control
  • Negative affective memories/states may propel
    behavior, unchecked by evolving socioemotional
    contexts

23
Implications
Persecuting Object
Victimized Self
Affect State
Hypervigilant Anxiety
  • The affect state of anxiety and hypervigilance
    associated with HPA hyperreactivity is linked to
    a specific internal object relationship involving
    a persecuting object and a victimized self.
  • (Gabbard,2005)

24
Aspects of Borderline Pathology That Call for
Treatment Modifications
  • Chronic suicidal and parasuicidal behavior
    (Linehan)
  • Treatment interfering behaviors (Linehan)
  • Deficits in comprehending self and others in
    terms of emotions, cognitions, motivations
    (mentalization) (Bateman Fonagy)
  • Borderline personality organization requires
    specific modifications in the therapeutic
    relationship (Kernberg)

25
COMMON FEATURES OF EFFECTIVE TREATMENTS FOR BPD
PATIENTS
  • Well structured treatments
  • Effort to enhance compliance
  • Clear treatment focus
  • Theoretically highly coherent to both therapist
    and patient
  • Relatively long-term
  • Encourage a powerful attachment relationship
    between therapist and patient therapist
    relatively active
  • Well integrated with other services for the
    patient
  • (Bateman Fonagy, 1999)

26
Three Treatments Modified for BPD
27
TFP AN OBJECT RELATIONS APPROACH TO BPD PATHOLOGY
  • Structured
  • Enhance compliance
  • Focus
  • Coherent to patient and therapist
  • Encourage relationship

28
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29
TFP Structured
  • Treatment begins with negotiation of a contract
    between therapist and patient
  • Contract specifies general responsibilities of
    patient and therapist
  • Contract specifies responsibilities around acting
    out (e.g., cutting, suicidal thoughts behavior)
  • The framework (contract) is referred back to
    whenever there is a breach of the contract

30
TFP Enhancement of Compliance
  • Statement of mutual responsibilities if treatment
    is to occur (Contract)
  • If patient fails to come to session, telephone
  • If patient breaches the contract, re-negotiate
    the contract
  • Any indication of self-destructive behavior or
    destruction of the treatment, high priority of
    the session

31
TFP Clear Focus
  • Current behavior outside therapy job,
    relationships
  • Current behavior of patient toward therapist
    hyperactivating and deactivating
  • Current internal experience in relationship
    between patient and therapist

32
Object Relations Model of BPO
Self
Other
Affects
The Object Relations Dyad
33
Transference
  • The activation of internal object relations in
    the relationship with the therapist.
  • These internalized relations with significant
    others are not literal representations of past
    relations, but are modified by fantasies and
    defenses.
  • In borderline patients, internal object relations
  • have been segregated and split off from each
    other
  • include fantasized persecutory and idealized
    relations.
  • Working with object relations that are activated
    in the immediate moment creates a therapy that is
    experience-near

34
Patients Internal World
.
-S1
-a1
-O1
  • S Self-Representation
  • O Object - Representation
  • a Affect
  • Examples
  • S1 Meek, abused figure
  • O1 Harsh authority figure
  • a 1 Fear
  • S2 Childish-dependent figure
  • O2 Ideal, giving figure
  • a2 Love
  • S3 Powerful, controlling figure
  • O3 Weak, Slave-like figure
  • a3 Wrath

S2
O2
a2
-O3
-a3
-S3
Etc.
35
Why focus onTRANSFERENCE?
  • Experience of Self
  • and of therapist

S1
S1
O1
a1
S2
S2
a2
O2
S3
O3
S3
a3
36
OBJECT RELATIONSHIP INTERACTIONS OSCILLATION
Object Rep
Self-Rep
Fear, Suspicion, Hate
Persecutor
Victim
Fear, Suspicion, Hate
Persecutor
Victim
(Oscillation is usually in behavior, not in
consciousness)
37
OBJECT RELATIONSHIP INTERACTIONS DEFENSE
Fear, Suspicion, Hate
Persecutor
Victim
Opposites
Longing, Love
Perfect Provider
Cared-for Child
38
TFP Coherent to Patient and Therapist
  • Treatment contract carefully articulates patient
    and therapist responsibilities
  • Clarification leading to confrontation leading to
    interpretation in the here-and-now

39
TFP Encourage Relationship
  • Sessions at a frequency of 2 times a week
  • Attention is drawn to implicit and explicit
    relationship conceptualizations

40
Randomized Controlled Trial (Clarkin, et al, 2007)
  • Male and female BPD, ages 18 to 50
  • Inclusion criteria Axis II BPD
  • Exclusion criteria Schizophrenia, Bipolar
    Disorder, Eating Disorder and Substance
    Dependence
  • Randomized to one of three treatments TFP, DBT,
    SPT
  • If indicated, medication by algorithm
  • Assessment at four points in time during one year
    of treatment

41
Summary Clinical change
  • Three structured treatments (TFP, DBT, SPT) are
    related to significant change in multiple domains
  • TFP was predictive of significant improvement in
    6 domains DBT predictive in 4 SPT in 5.
  • In direct contrast analyses, only change in
    suicidal behavior trended to favor TFP and DBT
    over SPT
  • Clarkin, Levy, Lenzenweger Kernberg, 2007

42
BPD Mechanisms of Change
  • DBT borderline patients change by learning
    affect regulation skills in the context of
    validation (Linehan)
  • MBT borderline patients change by increasing
    mentalization (Bateman Fonagy)
  • TFP borderline patients change by integrating
    representations of self and others and related
    affects (Kernberg)

43
Mechanism of Change in TFP
  • In successful treatment, the patient goes from
    intense, split, negative conceptions of self and
    others to affectively and cognitively nuanced and
    complicated conceptions of self and others
  • This process of change is experienced in the
    evolving conception of the therapist and self in
    the treatment relationship
  • This process of change is captured in the
    Reflective Functioning scale

44
Reflective Function (Fonagy, Target, Steele,
Steele, 1998)
  • Reflective Function is defined as the capacity to
    think or mentalize in terms of mental states
    (emotions, intentions, motivations) in
    understanding self and other.
  • RF rated on specific items of the Adult
    Attachment Interview (AAI)

45
Change in RF as a Function of Time and Treatment
(Levy et al, 2006)
46
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
  • Cognitive-behavioral and dynamic researchers see
    the need for treatment modification for
    borderline pathology
  • Treatments are modified to meet the nature of
    borderline pathology impulsivity, affect
    dysregulation, self-other relationship
    difficulties
  • Different treatments are effective but only for
    about 60 of the patients
  • Further treatment refinement through
  • Identifying subgroups of BPD
  • Focus on the mechanisms of change

47
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS (2)
  • Psychotherapy must be focused to be effective and
    efficient
  • The focus is on the problem areas presented by
    the patient
  • Patient problems reside in a context, i.e., the
    context of the individuals personality
  • Non-personality disordered patients can work
    collaboratively in problem-solving with the
    therapist
  • Patients with personality disorders present
    impediments to cooperative problem solving

48
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS (3)
  • Tailoring the treatment is not totally dependent
    on the diagnosis but also on non-diagnostic
    issues (Beutler Clarkin)
  • The more severe the pathology, the more need to
    tailor the treatment
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