| Literature DB >> 31574104 |
Kayla R Steele1, Michelle L Townsend1, Brin F S Grenyer1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31574104 PMCID: PMC6772038 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0223038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Preferred reporting items for systemic reviews flow diagram of search and selection of systematic reviews included in our overview.
Study characteristics of the included systematic reviews.
| Author (date) | Keinan, et al. (2012) | Laulik, et al. | Petfield, et al. (2015) | Eyden, et al. (2016) | Stepp, et al. (2016) | Winsper, et al. (2016) | Boucher, et al. (2017) | Ibrahim, et al. (2018) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Review Type | Systematic review and qualitative synthesis | Systematic review and qualitative synthesis | Systematic review and qualitative synthesis | Systematic review and qualitative synthesis | Systematic review and qualitative synthesis | Systematic review and meta-analysis | Systematic review and qualitative synthesis (narrative review) | Systematic review and qualitative synthesis |
| Title | A systematic review of the evidence-based psychosocial risk factors for understanding of borderline personality disorder | The link between personality disorder and parenting behaviours: A systematic review | Parenting in mothers with borderline personality disorder and impact on child outcomes | A systematic review of the parenting and outcomes experienced by offspring of mothers with borderline personality pathology: Potential mechanisms and clinical implications | A systematic review of risk factors prospectively associated with borderline personality disorder: Taking stock and moving forward | The aetiological and psychopathological validity of borderline personality disorder in youth: A systematic review and meta-analysis | Parent-child relationship associated with the development of borderline personality disorder: A systematic review | Childhood maltreatment and its link to borderline personality disorder features in children: A systematic review approach |
| Sample | 51 case-control and cohort studies examining psychosocial vulnerability factors for BPD that met the international EBM criteria. | 11 case-control, cohort and cross-sectional studies that examined parents with PD pathology (i.e. PD dx or significant features). | 17 cross-sectional studies that assessed mothers with BPD dx who were the primary caregiver to child/children (under 19 years). | 33 case-control, cross-sectional and cohort quantitative studies that examined mothers with BPD pathology and/or children of mothers with BPD pathology. | 39 longitudinal, prospective studies, exploring risk factors associated with BPD dx, sxs and features in 43,681 mainly female (54%) and Caucasian (69%) participants in community samples (73%). | 61 retrospective, cross-sectional and prospective studies that examined the aetiological and psychopathological validity of youth BPD (19 years and under). | 40 mostly cross-sectional (two longitudinal) studies that presented the perspectives of individuals with BPD and their parents and families | 10 longitudinal cohort, case-control and cross-sectional studies that explored the association between maltreatment and BF in children (12 years and under). |
| Aims | To provide a systematic review of the literature focussing on the psychosocial risk factors for BPD. | To determine if parental personality disorder is associated with impaired parenting practices and poor quality of parent-child interactions, and to provide directions for future research. | To systematically synthesise research findings in order to provide a better understanding of the consequences of maternal BPD. | To systematically search and narratively synthesise all research examining the parenting behaviours and attitudes of mothers with BPD, mother-offspring interactions, and offspring outcomes. | To summarise and synthesise identified study results, detail risk factors and discuss strengths and limitations of the literature. Secondly, to determine if evidence regarding BPD risk factors enhances developmental theories by explaining aetiology and identifying those at risk. | To examine associations between psychopathological and aetiological factors identified in the literature on adult and youth BPD. Secondly, to examine associations with continuous BPD symptoms in adults and youth. | To synthesise all relevant studies on PCR in BPD from 1980 onwards. | To explore research looking at associations between maltreatment and BPD or BF in childhood |
| Research Questions | N/R | N/R | 1. Are there deficits and difficulties in the parenting of mothers with BPD? | 1. What are the characteristics parenting behaviours of mothers with BP pathology? | N/R | N/R | 1. How is PCR described by BPD participants and their parents in comparison to other normative and clinical groups? | N/R |
| Inclusion Criteria | 1. Well documented cohort or case and control group studies that use the international ICD-10 or DSM-IV diagnostics, well documented standard patient interview methods and reliable statistical evaluations | 1. Parents aged 18 years or over | 1. Mothers diagnosed with BPD using standardised assessment procedures (or diagnostic techniques based on earlier editions of the DSM for older studies) | 1. Mother BPD dx or sxs and/or offspring (of any age) of mothers with BPD dx or sxs (assessed via standardised measure) | 1. Prospective, longitudinal studies of any follow-up duration with at least two assessment points | 1. Study published in a peer reviewed journal | 1. Study focused on the PCR in BPD | 1. Study makes an association of any type of maltreatment with BF in children or children with BPD dx |
| Search Criteria | Searched were conducted in the electronic databases Medline and PsychInfo using the search terms ‘borderline personality disorder’ and ‘risk factors’. | Searches were conducted in the electronic databases PsychINFO, Medline, EMBASE and Web of Science using an unknown search string that covered the following concepts: personality disorder, parenting capacity, parenting efficacy, parenting behaviours, parent-child interactions, child abuse and neglect; yielding 15,039 articles. 22 studies were identified through experts and two were hand searched from reference lists. | Searches were conducted in the electronic databases PsycINFO and MEDLINE using the search string: “child*” AND (“borderline personality disorder” OR “emotionally unstable personality disorder”); yielding 3814 articles. No hand searched articles were included. | Searches were conducted in the electronic databases PsychINFO, PubMed, EMBASE, Web of Science, Scopus and ASSIA using the search terms (borderline* or “emotionally unstable personality” or BPD) and (mother* or parent* or maternal*) and (child* or infant* or infancy or offspring or bab* or adolescen* or famil* or boy* or girl* or teenager* or youth* or young* or toddler* or daughter* or son*); yielding 10,047 articles. An additional 21 articles were extracted from hand searching. | Searches were conducted in electronic databases PubMed, CINAHL, PsychINFO, and ISI Web of Science using the search terms (borderline personality and [longitudinal or follow-up* or prospect*] and [precursor* or risk factor* or prodrom* or antecedent* or predict*] and [diagnosis or development]) and using hand searches of reference lists; yielding 376 results. | Searches were conducted in electronic databases Medline, Embase, PsychInfo and PubMed using the search string: (borderline* or “emotionally unstable personality disorder” or BPD) and (adolescen* or child* or young* or teen* or student*); yielding 19,078 articles. An additional 4 articles extracted via hand searching of reference lists of included studies and relevant narrative reviews. | Searches were conducted in the electronic databases PsychINFO, Medline and Web of Science using the search terms ‘borderline personality disorder’ and (mother* or father* or caregiver* or caretaker* or parent*) and the limits peer-reviewed journals, English or French language and earliest publication year 1980; yielding 1277 articles. No hand searched articles were included. | Searches were conducted in the electronic databases OvidSP, PubMed and Scopus using the search terms maltreatment, borderline disorder or borderline features and child; yielding 3902 results. The online database PsycINFO was used to map the primary search term, borderline and child and features or state or personality or traits or disorder and maltreatment or physical abuse or sexual abuse or verbal abuse or emotional abuse or neglect or foster or in care or looked after or adopted or institution or children’s home. Google scholar was used to check for unidentified articles using the search term borderline and children; yielding 211 results. An additional three articles were identified through hand searching reference lists. |
| Study selection | N/R | 1. Duplicates and ‘irrelevant’ articles were excluded, leaving 250 articles | 1. Non-English articles and duplicates were removed, leaving 2579 articles | Study selection was based on the PRSIMA and Cochrane guidelines: | Study selection was based on PRISMA-P guidelines: | Duplicates were excluded, leaving 8195 articles | 1. Duplicates were excluded, leaving 814 articles. All titles and abstracts were reviewed independently by two researchers | 1. Any articles that did not meet the study criteria were removed, included duplicates |
| Quality Appraisal | N/R | Quality assessment was formulated based on the CASP. To ensure consistency in the quality of the studies assessed, a 2nd independent reviewer verified 20% of the studies. Only studies deemed to be of moderate to high quality (i.e. 70% of above) were included in the review. | Quality was appraised using the STROBE checklist. On a scale of zero (bad) to five (good), four papers were categorised as ‘average to above average’ and 13 as ‘above average to good’. Five randomly selected articles were rescored by an independent rater, with inter-rate reliability giving a strong positive correlation ( | Quality was assessed by the 1st author using the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale, with the 2nd author independently assessing 50% of the studies for reliability. The quality assessment showed substantial inter-rater agreement (К = .77, | N/R | A quality assessment tool based on the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale was used to rate the methodological quality of each study. Each study was given a total score (out of six for aetiological factors, and five for psychopathological factors) reflecting key aspects of study methodology. | N/R | Quality was assessed using the CASP for case-control studies. The CASP considers three broad areas: are the results valid; what are the results; will the results help locally? |
| Reported Findings | Five vulnerability factors were identified and classified according to the EBM-criteria of best evidence: | Nine studies found evidence to support the existence of a positive association between PD dx and features and impaired parenting behaviour. In these studies, the presence of PD was related to: | Maternal BPD dx was associated with differences in parenting outcomes compared to control group, including: | Compared to control groups, mothers with BPD dx or sxs appear: | Multiple factors across social, familial, maltreatment and child domains increase the risk for BPD. The most robust risk indicators in there domains were: | Adult and youth BPD share common aetiological and psychopathological correlates: | BPD participants and their parents consistently reported a more dysfunctional PCR compared to PC and HC: | There is a link between maltreatment and BF in childhood: |
| Limitations | 1. The identified risk factors are not independent of each other | 1. The review comprised of only a small number of studies of varied quality | 1. The review excluded all papers that were not in English | 1. Heterogeneity in the operationalisation of parenting constructs, offspring outcomes and study method design | 1. There is a lack of specificity, with previous research demonstrating a nearly identical risk profile for a broad range of internalising and externalisation disorders | 1. Results may have been subject to publication bias due to the “file drawer” problem | 1. Cross-sectional studies on children or adolescents and all studies on mothers with BPD and their own children were excluded. This meant that a dimensional evaluation of BPD was not possible | 1. Studies used different methods to diagnose BPD or identify BF, with some not yet validated and others subject to informant bias |
Note. BPD = Borderline Personality Disorder. EBM = Evidence Based Medicine. PD = Personality Disorder. dx = diagnosis. sxs = symptoms. BF = Borderline Features. PCR = Parent-Child Relationship. ICD-10 = International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems– 10th revision. DSM-IV = Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Disorders– 4th Edition. HC = Healthy Comparison/control. OR = Odds Ratio. CI = Confidence Interval. PC = Psychiatric Comparison/control. PRISMA = Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses. CASP = Critical Appraisal Skills Programmes. STROBE = Strengthening the Reporting of Observational studies in Epidemiology. SES = Socioeconomic Status. IQ = Intelligence Quota. OPD = Other Personality Disorders.
Fig 2Parenting and personality disorder thematic and concept map.
Summary of key themes and sub-themes for qualitative analysis of systematic reviews.
| Key Themes | Early developmental vulnerability | Parental vulnerability |
|---|---|---|
| Leximancer Connectivity | 100% | 53% |
| Sub-themes ( | Disorder ( | Mothers ( |
| Personality ( | Parenting ( | |
| Children ( | Symptoms ( | |
| Risk ( | Emotional ( | |
| Factor ( | Interactions ( | |
| Relationship ( | Infants ( | |
| Abuse ( | Attachment ( | |
| Adolescents ( | Depression ( | |
| Features ( | Offspring ( | |
| Developmental ( | Care ( | |
| Psychopathology ( | ||
| Maltreatment ( | ||
| Diagnosis ( | ||
| Early ( | ||
| Treatment ( |
Note: the Leximancer Connectivity percentage indicates the relative importance of each theme (e.g., the higher the percentage, the more important the theme). The percentage is calculated using the connectedness of concepts within that theme.