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Journal Article

Citation

Smits ML, Feenstra DJ, Eeren HV, Bales DL, Laurenssen EMP, Blankers M, Soons MBJ, Dekker JJM, Lucas Z, Verheul R, Luyten P. Br. J. Psychiatry 2020; 216(2): 79-84.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Royal College of Psychiatry)

DOI

10.1192/bjp.2019.9

PMID

30791963

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Two types of mentalisation-based treatment (MBT) have been developed and empirically evaluated for borderline personality disorder (BPD): day hospital MBT (MBT-DH) and intensive out-patient MBT (MBT-IOP). No trial has yet compared their efficacy.
AIMS: To compare the efficacy of MBT-DH and MBT-IOP 18 months after start of treatment. MBT-DH was hypothesised to be superior to MBT-IOP because of its higher treatment intensity.
METHOD: In a multicentre randomised controlled trial (Nederlands Trial Register: NTR2292) conducted at three sites in the Netherlands, patients with BPD were randomly assigned to MBT-DH (n = 70) or MBT-IOP (n = 44). The primary outcome was symptom severity (Brief Symptom Inventory). Secondary outcome measures included borderline symptomatology, personality functioning, interpersonal functioning, quality of life and self-harm. Patients were assessed every 6 months from baseline to 18 months after start of treatment. Data were analysed using multilevel modelling based on intention-to-treat principles.
RESULTS: Significant improvements were found on all outcome measures, with moderate to very large effect sizes for both groups. MBT-DH was not superior to MBT-IOP on the primary outcome measure, but MBT-DH showed a clear tendency towards superiority on secondary outcomes.
CONCLUSIONS: Although MBT-DH was not superior to MBT-IOP on the primary outcome measure despite its greater treatment intensity, MBT-DH showed a tendency to be more effective on secondary outcomes, particularly in terms of relational functioning. Patients receiving MBT-DH and MBT-IOP, thus, seem to follow different trajectories of change, which may have important implications for clinical decision-making. Longer-term follow-up and cost-effectiveness considerations may ultimately determine the optimal intensity of specialised treatments such as MBT for patients with BPD.


Language: en

Keywords

Humans; Adult; Female; Male; Self-Injurious Behavior; Treatment Outcome; Quality of Life; randomized controlled trial; Hospitals; Netherlands; borderline personality disorder; Outpatients; Borderline Personality Disorder; Mentalization; treatment intensity; Mentalisation-Based Treatment

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