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. 2022 May;27(5):2514-2521.
doi: 10.1038/s41380-022-01503-z. Epub 2022 Mar 18.

Borderline personality disorder: associations with psychiatric disorders, somatic illnesses, trauma, and adverse behaviors

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Borderline personality disorder: associations with psychiatric disorders, somatic illnesses, trauma, and adverse behaviors

Ashley E Tate et al. Mol Psychiatry. 2022 May.

Abstract

In one of the largest, most comprehensive studies on borderline personality disorder (BPD) to date, this article places into context associations between this diagnosis and (1) 16 different psychiatric disorders, (2) eight somatic illnesses, and (3) six trauma and adverse behaviors, e.g., violent crime victimization and self-harm. Second, it examines the sex differences in individuals with BPD and their siblings. A total of 1,969,839 Swedish individuals were identified from national registers. Cumulative incidence with 95% confidence intervals (CI) was evaluated after 5 years of follow-up from BPD diagnosis and compared with a matched cohort. Associations were estimated as hazard ratios (HR) with 95% CIs from Cox regression. 12,175 individuals were diagnosed with BPD (85.3% female). Individuals diagnosed with BPD had higher cumulative incidences and HRs for nearly all analyzed indicators, especially psychiatric disorders. Anxiety disorders were most common (cumulative incidence 95% CI 33.13% [31.48-34.73]). Other notable findings from Cox regressions include psychotic disorders (HR 95% CI 24.48 [23.14-25.90]), epilepsy (3.38 [3.08-3.70]), violent crime victimization (7.65 [7.25-8.06]), and self-harm (17.72 [17.27-18.19]). HRs in males and females with BPD had overlapping CIs for nearly all indicators. This indicates that a BPD diagnosis is a marker of vulnerability for negative events and poor physical and mental health similarly for both males and females. Having a sibling with BPD was associated with an increased risk for psychiatric disorders, trauma, and adverse behaviors but not somatic disorders. Clinical implications include the need for increased support for patients with BPD navigating the health care system.

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Conflict of interest statement

Larsson reports: Evolan (speaker); Shire (speaker, grant recipient); Takeda (speaker, grant recipient) all outside the submitted work. Tate, Sahlin, Liu, Lu, Lundström, Lichtenstein, Kuja-Halkola report no financial relationships with commercial interests.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1. Cumulative incidence by 5 years after Borderline Personality Disorder diagnosis, estimate in percent and (95% confidence interval).
The cumulative incidence of each of the main indicators broken down by subgroups.
Fig. 2
Fig. 2. Associations with Borderline Personality Disorder diagnosis, hazard ratio and (95% confidence interval).
*Statistically significant after correcting for multiple testing using the Benjamini-Hochberg method, resulting in a p value threshold of 8.34 · 10−58.

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