Institute of Psychotherapy and General Psychiatry Service, Department of Psychiatry, Lausanne University Clinic and University of Lausanne and Lausanne University Hospital, Place Chauderon 18, CH-1003, Lausanne, Switzerland.
General Psychiatry Service, Department of Psychiatry, Lausanne University Clinic and University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Trials. 2020 Apr 16;21(1):335. doi: 10.1186/s13063-020-4229-z.
Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is one of the most frequent, most debilitating and lethal mental conditions and is associated with a serious burden of disease. Treatment for patients with BPD involves structured psychotherapy, and may involve brief psychiatric treatment as first-line intervention. No controlled study has assessed the effectiveness of such brief intervention. Whereas most psychotherapy studies in patients with BPD focus on the effectiveness of the intervention, we still lack an understanding of how and why these effects are produced from a patient process perspective. It is therefore of utmost importance to study the treatment-underlying mechanisms of change. The present study plans to apply novel measurement methods for assessing change in two central psychobiological processes in BPD: emotion and socio-cognitive processing. The study uses theory-driven and ecologically valid experimental tasks, which take the patient's individual experience as the anchor, by integrating methodology from psychotherapy process and neurofunctional imagery research.
The aim of this two-arm, randomized controlled study is to test the effects (i.e., symptom reduction) and the underlying mechanisms of change associated with a brief psychiatric treatment (10 sessions over 4 months), compared with treatment as usual. Participants (N = 80 patients with BPD) undergo assessments at four points (intake, 2 months, discharge, and 12-month follow up). In addition to symptom measures, individuals undergo a 2-step assessment for the potential mechanisms of change (i.e., emotion and socio-cognitive processing): (1) behavioral and (2) (for a sub-sample) neurofunctional. We hypothesize that change in the mechanisms explains the treatment effects.
This study uses an easy-to-implement treatment of BPD, and a sophisticated assessment procedure to demonstrate the critical role of psychobiological change in emotion and socio-cognitive processing in brief treatments. It will help increase the effectiveness of brief treatment for BPD and help diminish the societal burden of disease related to BPD, in these early stages of treatment. TRIAL REGISTRATION {2}: ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03717818. Registered on 24 October 2018). Protocol version {3} number 2 from 9 February 2018.
边缘型人格障碍(BPD)是最常见、最具致残性和致命性的精神疾病之一,与严重的疾病负担有关。BPD 患者的治疗包括结构化心理治疗,可能涉及简短的精神病治疗作为一线干预。目前还没有对照研究评估这种简短干预的有效性。虽然大多数 BPD 患者的心理治疗研究都集中在干预的有效性上,但我们仍然缺乏从患者过程角度理解这些效果产生的原因和方式。因此,研究治疗变化的潜在机制至关重要。本研究计划应用新的测量方法来评估 BPD 中两个核心心理生物学过程的变化:情绪和社会认知处理。该研究使用理论驱动和生态有效的实验任务,通过整合心理治疗过程和神经功能成像研究的方法,以患者的个体经验为锚点。
这项两臂、随机对照研究的目的是测试简短精神病治疗(4 个月内 10 次疗程)与常规治疗相比的效果(即症状减轻)和相关的潜在机制变化。参与者(N=80 名 BPD 患者)在四个时间点(入组、2 个月、出院和 12 个月随访)进行评估。除了症状评估外,个体还进行潜在机制变化的两步评估(即情绪和社会认知处理):(1)行为和(2)(对亚样本)神经功能。我们假设机制变化解释了治疗效果。
这项研究使用了一种易于实施的 BPD 治疗方法和一种复杂的评估程序,来证明情绪和社会认知处理中的心理生物学变化在简短治疗中的关键作用。它将有助于提高 BPD 简短治疗的效果,并帮助减轻 BPD 早期治疗相关的疾病社会负担。
{2}ClinicalTrials.gov:NCT03717818。注册于 2018 年 10 月 24 日)。{3}协议版本 2 来自 2018 年 2 月 9 日。