
Department of Psychological Medicine, Christchurch School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Christchurch, New Zealand
Correspondence: Professor Peter Joyce, Department of Psychological Medicine, Christchurch School of Medicine and Health Sciences, PO Box 4345, Christchurch, New Zealand. Tel: +64 3 3720 400; fax: +64 3 3720 407; e-mail: peter.joyce{at}chmeds.ac.nz
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Aims To determine whether personality disorder or traits have an adverse impact on treatment response to interpersonal psychotherapy or cognitivebehavioural therapy in people receiving out-patient treatment for depression.
Method The study was a randomised trial in a university-based clinical research unit for out-patients with depression.
Results Personality disorder did not adversely affect treatment response for patients with depression randomised to cognitivebehavioural therapy. Conversely, personality disorder did adversely affect treatment response for patients randomised to interpersonal psychotherapy.
Conclusions Despite the two therapies having comparable efficacy in patients with depression, response to interpersonal psychotherapy (but not cognitivebehavioural therapy) is affected by personality traits. This could suggest the two therapies are indicated for different patients or that they work by different mechanisms.
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We have longstanding interests in the prediction of treatment responses in depression (Joyce et al, 2002, 2003) and have reported that comorbid personality disorder has little impact on outcome in patients treated with antidepressant medication (Joyce et al, 2003; Mulder et al, 2003, 2006). In this paper we examine whether personality disorder or traits as assessed by a clinician interview based on DSMIV, or a self-report of temperament and character (Cloninger et al, 1993), have an impact on treatment response in patients with depression receiving psychotherapy. We also investigate whether the type of psychotherapy in this study interpersonal psychotherapy and cognitivebehavioural therapy has any impact.
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Participants
The companion paper (Luty et
al, 2007, this issue) describes the clinical features of the
sample, comprising 177 persons (mean age 35.2 years, 72% female) who were
randomised to receive either interpersonal psychotherapy or
cognitivebehavioural therapy for depression. Ten patients who had been
assessed for Axis I disorders and who had been randomised to treatment
withdrew from the study within the first few weeks of treatment and prior to
an assessment of Axis II personality psychopathology. Thus, this study, which
is focused on personality disorders, personality traits, temperament and
character, analyses the data for the 167 patients with depression for whom we
had complete personality measures. The 10 patients who withdrew (4 randomised
to interpersonal psychotherapy; 6 to cognitivebehavioural therapy) did
not differ significantly from the 167 patients remaining in the study with
regard to depression severity or melancholia.
Assessment
After obtaining written informed consent, the therapists (two psychiatrists
and three clinical psychologists) completed an assessment of Axis I disorders
using the Structured Clinical Interview for DSMIV (SCIDI;
Spitzer et al, 1987).
Depression severity was assessed using the MontgomeryÅsberg
Depression Rating Scale (MADRS; Montgomery
& Åsberg, 1979).
Among the self-report questionnaires completed by participants at this baseline assessment were the Structured Clinical Interview for Personality Disorders Questionnaire (SCIDPQ; First et al, 1997) and the Temperament and Character Inventory (TCI; Cloninger et al, 1994). The TCI measures four independently inherited temperament traits: harm avoidance, reward dependence, novelty seeking and persistence. Respectively these four traits represent our unconscious bias in the inhibition or cessation of behaviours (harm avoidance), our need for other people (reward dependence), our bias in the activation or initiation of behaviour (novelty seeking) and our tendency to continue striving in the absence of reward (persistence). In contrast, character represents our conscious self-concepts. Three character dimensions have been described: self-directedness, cooperativeness and self-transcendence. Respectively these represent our self-concept as an autonomous individual (self-directedness), our self-concept in relationship to others (cooperativeness) and our view of ourselves as part of the universe (self-transcendence). Low self-directedness and low cooperativeness are related to the presence of a clinically defined personality disorder, whereas temperament influences what type of personality disorder a person may have (Cloninger et al, 1993; Svrakic et al, 1993; Mulder & Joyce, 1997; Casey & Joyce, 1999; Mulder et al, 1999). Results from these questionnaires were not available to the therapists.
Approximately 6 weeks after assessment, randomisation and commencement of therapy, an independent clinician (one of four psychiatrists and three clinical psychologists, all trained in personality disorder assessments) completed the Structured Clinical Interview for DSMIV Axis II Personality Disorders (SCIDII; Spitzer et al, 1987). From the SCIDII we used both categorical (yes/no) measures of personality disorder and dimensional measures based upon number of personality disorder criteria rated as positive. Clinician-assessed severity of personality disorder was based on the proposal of Tyrer (2005), which codes the level of personality disorder severity as 03: no personality disorder codes as 0, sub-threshold personality disorder codes as 1, meeting criteria for one or more personality disorders within the same cluster codes as 2 and meeting criteria for two or more personality disorders from different clusters codes as 3. The therapists were not permitted to know the results from this structured assessment of Axis II psychopathology.
Details of the two intervention therapies, training and supervision, treatment integrity and outcome are detailed in the companion paper (Luty et al, 2007).
Statistical methods
Baseline characteristics of the participants with complete personality
disorder assessment data were compared using
2 tests,
t-tests or Pearson correlation coefficients. The primary outcome
measure used in this study was the percentage improvement in the MADRS score
from baseline to the end of weekly therapy, with last measure carried forward
in patients who did not complete weekly therapy. Given the interrelationships
among the personality disorder, temperament and character measures, a stepwise
multiple linear regression was run independently for each therapy within each
of these three domains. Further stepwise multiple linear regressions, one for
personality disorder measures and the second for the combined temperament and
character measures, were run within therapies, followed by analyses combining
both therapies and incorporating interaction terms with therapy.
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View this table: [in a new window] | Table 1 Temperament, character and personality disorders in depressed patients by therapy |
Clinician-assessed personality disorder and treatment response
Table 2 shows the effect of
clinician-assessed personality disorder on treatment outcome by therapy. For
participants without a personality disorder the two therapies produced
comparable treatment responses. However, for participants with any personality
disorder interpersonal psychotherapy had a poorer treatment outcome than
cognitivebehavioural therapy. Although numbers are limiting when
response is examined by specific personality disorder cluster, or by the four
most common individual personality disorders, the results consistently show a
pattern of personality disorder adversely affecting treatment outcome with
interpersonal psychotherapy but not with cognitivebehavioural therapy.
Statistically significantly poorer treatment response with interpersonal
psychotherapy is found in those with cluster A and C personality disorders and
in avoidant and paranoid personality disorders. Personality disorder severity
shows a comparable finding, with more severe personality disorder adversely
affecting response to interpersonal psychotherapy but not
cognitivebehavioural therapy.
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View this table: [in a new window] |
Table 2 Percentage improvement in depression score by therapy and personality
disorder
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From Table 3, which shows the univariate correlations of number of personality disorder symptoms with treatment response, by therapy, it can be seen that response to cognitivebehavioural therapy is unrelated to number of specific personality disorder symptoms. Conversely, a poorer response to interpersonal psychotherapy is seen in participants with more avoidant, paranoid, schizotypal or borderline symptoms.
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View this table: [in a new window] | Table 3 Univariate correlations of personality disorder symptoms with percentage improvement, by therapy |
Self-report temperament and character and treatment response
Table 4 shows the univariate
correlations of self-report temperament and character with treatment response,
by therapy. For cognitivebehavioural therapy only low persistence
predicts a worse treatment outcome. For interpersonal psychotherapy high harm
avoidance and low self-directedness strongly predict a poor treatment
response; low novelty seeking and low reward dependence also significantly
predict a poorer treatment response.
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View this table: [in a new window] | Table 4 Univariate correlations of temperament and character with percentage improvement, by therapy |
Relationships between personality disorder, temperament and character
The relationships (correlations) between clinician-interview personality
disorder symptoms and self-report temperament and character were consistent
with expectations and previous reports
(Cloninger et al,
1993; Mulder & Joyce,
1997; Casey & Joyce,
1999; Mulder et al,
1999).
Low self-directedness and low cooperativeness both correlated with total personality disorder symptoms (r=0.48, P< 0.001). Novelty seeking was positively correlated with cluster B personality disorder symptoms (r=0.25, P<0.01) and with borderline symptoms (r=0.22, P<0.01). Harm avoidance was correlated with cluster C personality disorder symptoms (r=0.47, P<0.001), plus avoidant symptoms (r=0.52, P<0.001), dependent symptoms (r=0.28, P<0.001), paranoid symptoms (r=0.31, P<0.001), schizotypal symptoms (r=0.32, P<0.001) and borderline symptoms (r=0.24, P<0.001). Low reward dependence was most strongly correlated with cluster A personality disorder symptoms (r=0.39, P<0.001) and schizoid symptoms (r=0.38, P<0.001).
Multivariate prediction of treatment response by therapy
Table 5 shows the results of
a series of stepwise multiple regressions predicting mean percentage
improvement from personality variables by therapy. The first observation of
note from this table is that personality minimally predicts outcome for
patients randomised to cognitivebehavioural therapy. The corollary of
these findings is that neither personality traits nor disorders have an
adverse impact on the outcome of patients with depression treated with this
therapy.
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View this table: [in a new window] | Table 5 Multivariate prediction of percentage improvement from personality disorder symptoms, temperament and character, by therapy |
However, for interpersonal psychotherapy, personality can have a major impact on treatment response in patients with depression. A simple categorical personality disorder diagnosis (yes/no) explains 8.9% of outcome, with those with a personality disorder having a poorer outcome (see Table 2). Using Tyrers four-point measure of personality disorder severity (Tyrer, 2005) explains 12% of treatment outcome, with a mean improvement of 61% in those with no personality dysfunction declining to a 25% improvement in those with complex personality disorder (i.e. disorders in at least two separate clusters). However, counts of personality disorder symptoms explain 20% of treatment response, with avoidant and schizoid symptoms predicting poor outcome.
The TCI similarly predicts response to interpersonal psychotherapy. Temperament explains 18% of treatment outcome, with high harm avoidance and low reward dependence predicting poor outcome (related respectively to avoidant and schizoid symptoms). Self-directedness explains 12.5% of the treatment outcome. Combining temperament and character scales does not improve on the 18% explained by temperament, as harm avoidance and self-directedness are negatively correlated 0.5.
Finally, the combination of clinician interview and the TCI explains 26% of treatment outcome, with both high harm avoidance and avoidant personality disorder symptoms (despite being correlated 0.52) and schizoid personality disorder symptoms being the significant variables.
Prediction of treatment response across therapies
Table 6 shows the results of
multiple regression across therapies for clinician interview and TCI data
separately. From the clinician interview data it can be seen that high levels
of avoidant personality disorder symptoms contribute to a poorer treatment
outcome, and that for both high avoidant personality disorder symptoms and
schizoid symptoms there is an interaction with therapy such that those with
high personality disorder symptoms do worse with interpersonal
psychotherapy.
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View this table: [in a new window] | Table 6 Multivariate prediction of percentage improvement from temperament and character, and personality disorder symptoms across therapies |
The results with the TCI are generally similar, in that high harm avoidance and low reward dependence are associated with a poorer treatment outcome. There is also an interaction of harm avoidance with therapy, such that for those with high harm avoidance interpersonal psychotherapy is associated with a poorer treatment outcome.
Confounding by severity of depression
In the companion paper (Luty et
al, 2007) it was reported that interpersonal psychotherapy
was associated with a poorer outcome in severe depression (MADRS score
30). We ran analyses again including severity and severity x
therapy. The personality predictors and the severity x therapy findings
remained in the final multiple regression, and the inclusion of the severity
x therapy variable added approximately a further 3% to the variance
explained by the personality predictors of outcome.
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When we moved beyond personality disorder or personality disorder severity, and examined combinations of personality disorder symptoms as dimensions, or temperament, then 1820% of variance in outcome with interpersonal psychotherapy was explained. With the clinician interview the major determinant of outcome was avoidant symptoms and the secondary determinant was schizoid symptoms. With the TCI temperament scales the major determinant of poorer outcome was high harm avoidance and the secondary determinant was low reward dependence. Given that avoidant symptoms correlated with harm avoidance (0.52) and that schizoid symptoms correlated with low reward dependence (0.38), these are highly congruent findings. It is also noteworthy that a combination of clinician interview and self-report personality variables explains over 25% of the treatment outcome with interpersonal psychotherapy, which suggests that neither method of assessing personality fully captures the personality traits that are influencing the outcome of this therapy.
When outcome was assessed across therapies, personality variables interacted with therapy in predicting outcome. The major finding with clinician interview data was the interaction of therapy with avoidant symptoms, whereas the comparable finding with the TCI was the interaction of therapy with harm avoidance. Either way, this suggests that for patients with avoidant symptoms or high harm avoidance cognitivebehavioural therapy may be superior to interpersonal psychotherapy. Indeed, for patients with depression and avoidant personality disorder, cognitivebehavioural therapy was superior. These findings are congruent with the study by Barber & Muenz (1996), whose analysis of data from the National Institute of Mental Health Collaborative Treatment of Depression Study showed cognitivebehavioural therapy to be superior to interpersonal psychotherapy for patients with depression and avoidant personality. Their other finding, that interpersonal psychotherapy was superior to cognitivebehavioural therapy in those with obsessivecompulsive personality (Barber & Muenz, 1996), was not replicated by us; indeed, our results tended in the opposite direction.
Our results need to be considered in the context of the strengths and limitations of this randomised clinical trial. Although this is the largest direct comparison of interpersonal psychotherapy and cognitivebehavioural therapy for depression, for analyses of subgroups of patients with depression and specific personality disorders the numbers were perhaps marginal. However, the use of dimensional measures of personality, which tend to be more statistically powerful, produced significant results. The key outcome in this study was percentage improvement in depressive symptoms after 16 weeks of weekly therapy, and the results reported may not be relevant to the prediction of longer-term outcome.
Our finding that personality disorder does not have an adverse impact on treatment response to cognitivebehavioural therapy in depression is consistent with findings that personality disorder does not adversely affect treatment response to antidepressant drugs in depression (Mulder, 2002; Kool et al, 2005). However, it is therefore interesting that personality disorder does adversely affect treatment response to interpersonal psychotherapy. It is also interesting to speculate whether the latter finding extends to other dynamic psychotherapies, thus suggesting they should not be treatments of choice for depression in patients with personality disorders. This suggestion would be at odds with the traditional clinical belief that dynamic psychotherapies are indicated for patients with personality disorders.
The finding that high harm avoidance and/or avoidant personality symptoms interfere with the efficacy of interpersonal psychotherapy is consistent with findings that high negative affect or neuroticism is a negative prognostic factor in the treatment of depression. The more original finding that low reward dependence and/or schizoid symptoms decrease treatment response could be interpreted as evidence for interpersonal deficits (Luty et al, 1998), which have been considered the most difficult of the interpersonal problem areas in which to effect therapeutic gain. An alternative way of interpreting the findings regarding schizoid symptoms is that interpersonal psychotherapy, which formulates depression within an interpersonal context, is not indicated in patients who have a low need for interpersonal contact (schizoid and/or low reward dependence).
Even though the two therapies had comparable treatment efficacy for depression, our findings that personality disorder does not adversely affect the outcome for depression treated with cognitivebehavioural therapy but does adversely affect the outcome of treatment with interpersonal psychotherapy suggests that these two psychotherapies may work for different patients or by different mechanisms.
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P. Tyrer From the Editor's desk The British Journal of Psychiatry, February 1, 2008; 192(2): 160 - 160. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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