Eielsen Hanna P, Vrabel KariAnne, Olofsson Malin E
Research Institute, Modum Bad, Vikersund, Norway.
Department of Psychology, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
J Clin Psychol. 2025 Aug;81(8):694-705. doi: 10.1002/jclp.23805. Epub 2025 Apr 23.
Personality disorders (PD) are highly prevalent among patients with eating disorders (ED) and are often associated with unfavorable treatment outcomes. This may be due to poor engagement in therapy, interpersonal difficulties hampering the treatment alliance, and emotional instability overshadowing the ED symptoms. However, the patients' perspectives on these processes are understudied. To illustrate the potential of addressing personality vulnerabilities and relational issues in ED treatment, we present the case of Jade, a 29-year-old female with longstanding bulimia nervosa, major depressive disorder, and posttraumatic stress disorder following childhood maltreatment. Jade had been diagnosed with multiple PD such as paranoid, borderline, and avoidant PD, and at the time of treatment, she fulfilled the diagnostic criteria for the latter. Jade participated in a 12-week Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) inpatient program in a specialized ED unit. The treatment focused on the complex symptom interplay, specifically connecting early memories to current reactions, coping strategies, and relationship patterns. Jade normalized her eating patterns and trauma symptoms decreased. She highlighted being able to trust the staff and the treatment program as a prerequisite for ED improvement. Her narrative was triangulated with real-time self-report data examining ED symptoms (EDE-Q), interpersonal patterns (IIP-64), and trauma symptoms (PSS-SR) at assessment, admission, discharge, and 1-year follow-up. Jade was fully recovered from the ED at 1-year follow-up, however, the avoidant PD persisted. Considering the frequent ED-PD co-occurrence, the patient perspective may provide valuable insight to reduce long-term suffering by guiding tailored treatment approaches to improve outcomes for these difficult-to-treat patients. Trial Registration: NCT02649114.
人格障碍(PD)在饮食失调(ED)患者中极为普遍,且常与不良治疗结果相关。这可能是由于治疗参与度低、人际关系困难阻碍了治疗联盟,以及情绪不稳定掩盖了饮食失调症状。然而,患者对这些过程的看法却鲜有研究。为了说明在饮食失调治疗中解决人格脆弱性和关系问题的潜力,我们介绍了杰德的案例,她是一名29岁女性,长期患有神经性贪食症、重度抑郁症,童年受虐后还患有创伤后应激障碍。杰德被诊断患有多种人格障碍,如偏执型、边缘型和回避型人格障碍,在治疗时,她符合后者的诊断标准。杰德参加了一个专门的饮食失调病房为期12周的认知行为疗法(CBT)住院项目。治疗聚焦于复杂的症状相互作用,特别是将早期记忆与当前反应、应对策略和关系模式联系起来。杰德的饮食模式恢复正常,创伤症状减轻。她强调能够信任工作人员和治疗项目是饮食失调改善的前提条件。通过在评估、入院、出院和1年随访时检查饮食失调症状(EDE-Q)、人际模式(IIP-64)和创伤症状(PSS-SR)的实时自我报告数据,对她的叙述进行了三角验证。在1年随访时,杰德已从饮食失调中完全康复,然而,回避型人格障碍仍然存在。考虑到饮食失调与人格障碍的频繁共病,患者的观点可能为减少长期痛苦提供有价值的见解,通过指导量身定制的治疗方法来改善这些难治性患者的治疗结果。试验注册:NCT02649114。