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PERSONALITY DISORDER Developments, Diagnosis and Treatment Dr Scott Ferris Consultant Psychiatrist in Psychotherapy Farnham Road Hospital [email protected] Prevalence (Coid, et al 2006) UK population- 5% Primary care- 10-20% CMHRS- 30-40% Inpatient Psychiatry- 40-50% SABP- Only 12% Personality (RCPscyh) : Characteristics, ‘traits’ that we develop as we grow up, which make us individuals, this includes how we: -Think -Feel -Behave Eg/ Fearless, charming, dutiful… Personality is adaptive, but also determined by biology and temperament Personality disorder Parts of personality develop in ways that makes I It difficult to live with yourself and/ or others. Traits become ‘maladaptive’ …ruthless, cold (Bond) May have been adaptive in past and remain so in some circumstances, but maladaptive in others. - Are Bonds traits maladaptive in his current environment? When is a personality disordered? Epistemic Trust (Fonagy and others) Epistemic Trust (Fonagy and others,UCL) Cultural Evolution (pleistocene period)- based on learning and transmission of knowledge, as opposed to genes. Importance of Epistemic Trust in social and cultural learning. Determining who and what to trust. Linked with attachment. A problem in people with personality disorder (attachment disruption)– difficult to change, adapt, ‘evolve’. Cant learn how to use these ‘tools’. Therapeutic implications. Would you trust this man? DSM-5 Vs ICD-11 – The Great Debate DSM 5 (APA-2013) DSM- 5: Retains the PD categories • Cluster A, B, C PD categories (DSM-5) Cluster A- ‘odd, eccentric’ : Paranoid, schizoid, schizotypal Cluster B- ‘dramatic, emotional, erratic’ : Borderline, histrionic, antisocial, narcissistic Cluster C- ‘anxious, fearful’ : Avoidant, dependent, obsessive-compulsive Study: Samuels et al., 2002 Crawford et al., 2005 Lenzenweger et al., 2007 Instrument Used: IPDE SCID-II IPDE Sample Size: (742) (644) (5692) -Paranoid 0.7% 5.1% 2.3% -Schizoid 0.9% 1.7% 4.9% -Schizotypal 0.6% 1.1% 3.3% -Antisocial 4.1% 1.2% 1.0% -Borderline 0.5% 3.9% 1.6% -Histrionic 0.2% 0.9% - -Narcissistic - 2.2% - -Avoidant 1.8% 6.4% 5.2% -Dependent 0.1% 0.8% 0.6% -Obsessive-Compulsive - 4.7% 2.4% PD Unspecified - - 1.6% Any PD 9.0% 15.7% 9.1% DSM-5 Vs ICD-11 – The Great Debate ICD- 11 (Due 2015) Focus on dimensions, with trait domains Mild, moderate, severe PD Personality difficulty (Z-code) Reflects research and clinical experience, allow patients to ‘progress’, reduce stigma. ICD-11- Proposed trait domains Anankastic Concern over control and regulation of behaviour. Eg/ perfectionism, stubbornness, deliberation. Detached (schizoid) Social indifference and impaired capacity for pleasure. Eg/ aloof, solitary, unassertive. Dissocial (antagonistic) Disregard for social convention and rights of others. Eg/ lack of empathy, aggression, inability to maintain pro-social goal orientated behaviour. Emotional distress Tendency to evaluate and respond negatively to self, world and others. Eg/ self-conscious, fearful, emotional dysregulation. How to diagnose? Diagnostic criteria (ICD-10) Patterns of inner experience and behaviour that deviate markedly from ‘norm’ in 1+ areas: • Cognition • Affectivity • Impulse control • Manner of relating to others Deviation must be pervasive, inflexible, dysfunctional Cause personal distress or adverse environmental affects Stable and enduring since adolescence Not caused by other psychiatric disorder or organic brain disease Diagnosing Clinical: • History, collateral history, mental state exam, experience in consultation room (‘countertransference’) and others in GP surgery (receptionist) • Attend 5X more, less concordant with treatment, dissatisfied with GP care (Moran et al, 2000) Psychometric tools: • SCID-II : structured clinical interview • MCMI-III (Millon) : patient questionnaire • PCL-R (Hare) : semi-structured interview +notes Differential Diagnosis Many psychiatric disorders. High co-morbidity, Axis I & II. Which is predominant? 45% patients with medically unexplained motor symptoms have PD (Crimlisk et al, 1998) Most common false positives (APA): Bipolar disorder (17%) Depression (13%) Anxiety disorders (10%) TREATMENT Borderline PD 1% population, young women commonly present. Broad variation in presentations. Instability of interpersonal relationships, self-image and mood, and impulsive behaviour. (+/- transient psychotic symptoms). BPO, Mentalizing Frequent co-morbidity- Axis I and II Mentalizing (Bateman, Fonagy UCL) A focus on mental states in oneself or in others, particularly as an explanation for behaviour. Form of social cognition. Loss of mentalizing capacity in emotionally intense relationships. Re-emergence of early concrete modes of thinking Impulsive behaviour in attempt to re-establish equilibrium Treatment- Borderline PD- NICE Guidance 2009 General Principles Person centred, communication, carers Access to services, promote autonomy Develop trust and optimism Manage endings and transitions Care/ crisis planning Clear pathways and communication between services Treatment- BPD- NICE 2009. Primary Care Recognition- Refer to CMHRS/ CAMHS if deteriorating or significant emotional disturbance and/or risky behaviours Crisis Management- assess current risk, ask about previous episodes and Mx strategies. Try to contain anxiety by focusing on current problems and identifying manageable changes that might help (?help re-establish mentalizing) Offer follow-up appt. Treatment- BPD- NICE 2009 Drug treatment No drug should be used specifically to treat BPD or its manifestations. Only use drugs for treatment of co-morbidity In crisis - consider risks and psychological role, only use short term (<1 week), low dose, safe (overdosing), low addictive/ misuse properties. (eg. antihistamine). Provide information, review Treatment- BPD Secondary care CMHRS or CAMHS- Assessment and care planning. ‘Structured clinical management’. STEPPS/ iMBT (psych-ed) Psychological Treatment Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT)- managing emotions Mentalization Based Therapy (MBT)- managing relationships Specialist PD services Assess / treat complex/ high risk cases, consultation, supervision, training, service development. Treatment- BPD Inpatient treatment (NICE) Only admit in crisis if no other way of managing significant risk (or under MHA detention) Actively involve patient in decision, pros/ cons and agree purpose and length of admission. HTT- also drop-ins- ‘safe haven’ Café, WBC, Aldershot Service user-led organisations Emergence SUN project Antisocial PD (NICE guidance, 2009) Key priorities for implementation Developing an optimistic and trusting relationship •Staff working with people with antisocial personality disorder should recognise that a positive and rewarding approach is more likely to be successful than a punitive approach in engaging and retaining people in treatment. Staff should: ◦explore treatment options in an atmosphere of hope and optimism, explaining that recovery is possible and attainable ◦build a trusting relationship, work in an open, engaging and non-judgemental manner, and be consistent and reliable. Assessment in forensic/specialist personality disorder services •Healthcare professionals in forensic or specialist personality disorder services should consider, as part of a structured clinical assessment, routinely using: ◦a standardised measure of the severity of antisocial personality disorder such as Psychopathy Checklist–Revised (PCL-R) or Screening version (PCL-SV) ◦a formal assessment tool such as Historical, Clinical, Risk Management-20 (HCR-20) to develop a risk management strategy. Treatment of comorbid disorders •People with antisocial personality disorder should be offered treatment for any comorbid disorders in line with recommendations in the relevant NICE clinical guideline. The role of psychological interventions •Consider offering group-based cognitive and behavioural interventions (for example, programmes such as 'reasoning and rehabilitation') focused on reducing offending and other antisocial behaviour. Multi-agency care •Provision of services for people with antisocial personality disorder often involves significant inter-agency working. Therefore, services should ensure that there are clear pathways for people with antisocial personality disorder so that the most effective multiagency care is provided. SABP- PD strategy (2014) Full document available at trust website: http://nww.sabp.nhs.uk/ Currently series of work streams looking at implementation of the strategy- run through to 2016 Thank you. Please ask me for leaflets!