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Clinical utility of dimensional models for personality pathology

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Title: Clinical utility of dimensional models for personality pathology


1
Clinical utility of dimensional models for
personality pathology
  • Roel Verheul

Viersprong Institute for Studies on Personality
Disorders (VISPD) Center of Psychotherapy De
Viersprong Department of Psychology University
of Amsterdam
2
Criteria for an optimal classification system (1)
  • It is not easy to arrive at a diagnostically
    valid classification system, i.e. a system
  • providing sufficient coverage of the domain of
    personality pathology, and
  • being consistent with up-to-date empirical
    findings regarding the
  • dimensionality versus taxonicity,
  • pathogenesis, and
  • changeability of personality disorder,.

3
Criteria for an optimal classification system (2)
  • . yet it is perhaps even more difficult to
    design a clinically useful classification system!
  • Clinical utility should be the driving force
    behind future revisions!

4
Clinical utility
  • Definition
  • The systems clinical utility is the extent to
    which it assists clinical decision makers in
    fulfilling the various functions of a psychiatric
    classification (cf. First et al., 2004)

5
Clinical utility
  • Definition
  • Diagnostic validity is a requirement for clinical
    utility

6
Clinical utility
  • Definition
  • Diagnostic validity required
  • Functions of psychiatric classification
  • Covering a certain domain of psychopathology
  • Helping clinicians to understand patients
  • Providing reliable diagnoses
  • Enabling professional communication
  • Assisting clinical decision making

7
Components of clinical utility
  • User acceptability and accuracy
  • Professional communication
  • Interrater reliability
  • Subtlety of information
  • Clinical decision making

8
1. User acceptability and accuracy
  • Classification is worthless if not used at all,
    or if not used correctly

9
1. User acceptability and accuracy
  • Classification is worthless if not used at all,
    and if not used correctly
  • Users have
  • Limited time
  • Limited resources
  • Limited education / understanding
  • Different language(s)

10
1. User acceptability and accuracy
  • Classification is worthless if not used at all,
    and if not used correctly
  • Users have
  • We need a system that is
  • Fast, simple, cheap, feasible, and comprehensible
    !!

11
Complexity of current system structure for each
criterion
Probing
If denial no reason to doubt the answer
Score 0
yes
Does answer fit in with criterion?
No
Score 0
yes
Are the general criteria met?
Axis-I-related or lt past 5 year
Score 0
yes
frequency Depending on severity
consequences
Score 1,2(,3)
12
Recommendations
  • This element is critically important, and should
    be covered by the field trials, e.g.
  • Surveying users reactions to proposed changes
    reasons behind judgments (!)
  • Measuring the impact of changes on ease of use
    (e.g., by timing duration of assessment)
  • Comparing accuracy of clinician-based with
    expert/interview/consensus-based diagnoses

13
2. Professional communication
  • Ease in communication has often been referred to
    as one of the advantages of categorical system
  • However
  • Only true for prototypic cases ( 20)
  • Not true for 80 non-prototypic subthreshold
    cases
  • Clinicians like detailed information
  • Hierarchical systems might be simpler to
    communicate
  • Supposed advantage might actually reflect
    familiarity

14
Recommendations
  • This element is likely to be a consequence rather
    than a prerequisite of clinical utility
  • Nevertheless, DSM-V should pay considerable
    attention to communicative aspects

15
3. Interrater reliability
  • DSM system is developed for practitioners
  • Reliable DSM-IV diagnoses in realworld practice
    not feasible, especially in non-prototypic cases!
  • Inter-instrument disagreement!
  • Aim should be to develop a system that can be
    accurately (reliably) applied

16
Recommendations
  • Important issue is the acceptability of
    structured and standardized measures!
  • Perhaps, it is recommendable
  • (a) to obtain expert consensus about a standard
    measure or even develop one,
  • (b) to develop guidelines for assessment
  • The possible introduction of a completely new
    system would create a unique chance in this
    regard

17
4. Subtlety of diagnosis
  • Dimensional systems gt categorical systems
  • Subtlety depends on of dimensions, e.g. FFM gt
    spectra models.
  • However, models differ with respect to
  • Clinical relevance of dimensions
  • Coverage of adaptive versus maladaptive range
  • Inclusion of strengths in addition to pathology

18
Recommendations
  • Sufficient comprehensiveness is critically
    important, although purpose is to simplify
    complexity
  • Research possibilities include
  • Clinician surveys to identify clinically relevant
    concepts
  • Comparison of models with respect to level of
    richness/relevance of descriptions of case
    vignettes
  • Psychometric analyses to study
  • coverage (IRT) of (mal)adaptive range
  • incremental coverage of an integrated model
    (EFA/CFA)

19
5. Clinical decision making
  • Misunderstanding yes/no decisions are the
    exception, not the rule
  • Clinical decision making typically involves
    determining the appropriate degree of various
    treatment characteristics and therapist behaviors
  • Perhaps the most important determinant of
    clinical utility ? what can we learn from the
    current situation?

20
Situation in The Netherlands
  • DSM-IV is viewed as an administrative system
  • Most frequent diagnoses include PDNOS and
    diagnosis deferred (799.9)
  • Polarization between descriptive and structural
    diagnosis
  • Kernbergian thinking is popular severity
    dimension
  • For the DSM-V to have more impact on clinical
    practice, it is important not to ignore these
    signals

21
Three major domains of decision making
  • Determining the
  • Necessity and benefit of treatment
  • Macrotreatment level general treatment model
    most likely to be effective and efficient
  • Microtreatment level type of interventions most
    likely to be helpful within the treatment model

22
Three major domains of decision making
  • Necessity and benefit
  • Spontaneous recovery
  • e.g., isolated facet elevations within N, while
    normal A/C
  • Patients not likely to respond
  • e.g., FFM misery triad high N, low E, low C ?
    supportive, palliative, focusing on
    rehabilitation, practical issues and symptom
    relief
  • Patients at risk for negative response
  • e.g., strong psychopathic traits

23
Three major domains of decision making
  • Necessity and benefit of treatment
  • Macrotreatment decisions higher-order level
  • Setting severity/rigidity, work/children
  • Format interpersonal and system problems
  • Major strategies extraversion / openness (?)
  • Duration severity/rigidity, strengths
  • Medication personality symptoms, comorbidity

24
Theoretical orientation and personalityMiller,
1991
25
Three major domains of decision making
  • Necessity and benefit of treatment
  • Macrotreatment decisions
  • Microtreatment decisions lower-order level
  • Goal setting, e.g. self-harm, trust
  • Matching patient characteristics to therapists,
    e.g. dependency, grandiosity
  • Determining degree of support, e.g. vulnerability
  • Determining degree of structure / limit setting,
    e.g. conduct problems, compulsivity

26
Recommendations
  • In general, dimensional system more consistent
    with clinical decision making
  • It is tempting to demand hard evidence (RCTs?),
    but
  • Bridge too far for PD no practice guidelines
    yet, so sole reliance on outcome
  • Such a requirement would be unprecedented
  • Revisions typically yield gradual and delayed
    changes
  • I would suggest case vignette studies comparing
    clinician and expert decisions across various
    models
  • Review of predictor studies!

27
Consumers report
28
Tentative comparison of models
  • Overall clinical utility
  • Categorical lt Hybrid lt Purely dimensional models
  • Dimensional models
  • DAPP, SNAP, NEO best candidates
  • Higher-order level similar!!!
  • Integrated or collapsed model might be optimal!
  • e.g. coverage both adaptive and maladaptive
    range, inclusion of positive and negative traits,
    support in the field

29
Strategies for case identification
  • Necessity
  • Legal purposes
  • Medical purposes
  • Administrative purposes
  • Credibility of public health issue
  • Funding purposes

30
Strategies for case identification
  • Necessity
  • Cutoffs do not solve the problem!
  • Statistical deviance is neither a necessary, nor
    a sufficient criterion for disorder

31
Strategies for case identification
  • Necessity
  • Cutoffs do not solve the problem!
  • Several strategies have been proposed
  • Cloninger (2000)
  • Livesley Jang (2000)
  • Westen Shedler (2000)
  • Widiger et al. (2002)
  • Tyrer (1996)

32
Some consensus
  • No redundancy
  • one disorder (e.g., Tyrer, Livesley, Cloninger)
  • Definition
  • impairments, dysfunctioning, adaptive failure
  • Severity dimension
  • with several cutoffs

33
Conclusion
  • Clinical utility should be the driving force
    behind future revisions
  • Dimensional gt hybrid gt categorical models
  • Integrated dimensional model might be optimal
  • Strategy for case identification one category,
    impairment definition, severity dimension

34
Research priorities
35
Research priorities
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