| Literature DB >> 35070783 |
Camilla Rinaldi1, Margherita Attanasio2, Marco Valenti2, Monica Mazza2, Roberto Keller3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Differential diagnosis, comorbidities and overlaps with other psychiatric disorders are common among adults with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), but clinical assessments often omit screening for personality disorders (PD), which are especially common in individuals with high-functioning ASD where there is less need for support. AIM: To summarize the research findings on PD in adults with ASD and without intellectual disability, focusing on comorbidity and differential diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: Adulthood; Asperger’s Syndrome; Autism spectrum disorder; Comorbidity; Differential diagnosis; Personality disorder
Year: 2021 PMID: 35070783 PMCID: PMC8717043 DOI: 10.5498/wjp.v11.i12.1366
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Psychiatry ISSN: 2220-3206
Figure 1Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses flow diagram of the systematic research process.
Description of the studies included in the systematic review
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| Soderstrom | NeuropsychiatricClinic in Sweden | To study the personality characteristics of adults with AS | One sample | Small sample size |
| Anckarsäter | Neuropsychiatric Clinic in Sweden | To describe PD in relations to ADHD and ASD symptoms | One sample | Non-specific symptoms may be overselected |
| Ketelaars | Center of Expertise for Autism in Netherlands | To explore difference between patients with mild ASD and patients without ASD in term of AQ scores and psychiatric comorbidity |
| Small sample size |
| Rydén and Bejerot[ | Psychiatric setting (tertiary unit) in Sweden | To characterize psychiatric patients with ASD in regard to demographical factors, psychiatric comorbidity and personality traits and compare the ASD group with a psychiatric control group; to compare differences of personality traits between females and males in the ASD group. | Fisher exact test; | Not ADOS/ADI-R for assessing ASD; A naturalistic study |
| Hofvander | Neuropsychiatric Hospital in France NeuropsychiatricClinic in Sweden | To describe the clinical presentation and psychosocial outcome of a group of normal intelligence adults with ASD |
| Lack of comparison group; Two studies sites; Prevalence of comorbid psychiatric conditions may be overestimated |
| Sizoo | Two diagnostic centers specialized for adult patients with developmental disorders in Netherlands | To test whether adults with ASD or ADHD have distinct personality profiles, to assess how personality profiles in these groups differed by SUD status | One sample | The clinically based diagnostic procedures; The absence of a psychiatric control group; All participants were diagnosed in adulthood |
| Geurts and Jansen[ | Tertiary psychiatric unit from diagnosing ASD in Netherlands | To draw the pathway to a diagnosis for adults referred to ASD assessment | Mann-Whitney | Retrospective chart study; Not standardized clinical interviews for assessing axis I and axis II diagnosis |
| Kanai | University Hospital in Japan | To examine the clinical characteristics of adults with AS | Spearman’s rank correlation coefficient | Small sample size |
| Kanai | University Hospital in Japan | To examine the clinical characteristics of adults with AS | Mann-Whitney | Small sample size |
| Lugnegård | Neuropsychiatric clinics in Sweden | To explore the presence of PD in young adults with AS |
| Small sample size |
| Schriber | Local recruitment by physicians, psychologists, speech and language pathologists, occupational therapists, advocacy groups, regional centers, ASD support groups in United States | To compare self-reports of Big Five personality traits in adults with ASD to those of typically developing adults. | Independent sample | Small sample size |
| Hesselmark | Tertiary psychiatric unit for diagnosing ASD; a community based facility for ASD; a website for ASD | To test validity and reliability of self-report data using the NEO-PI-R in adults with ASD | Independent sample | Small sample size |
| Strunz | Department of Psychiatry at a University Hospital in Germany | To identify personality traits in adults with ASD and to differentiate them from patients with NPD, BPD and NCC | MANOVA | Selection bias (BPD and NPD were inpatients, while ASD were outpatients) |
| Helles | Neuropsychiatric Centre in Sweden | To examine temperament and character in males who were diagnosed with AS in childhood and followed prospectively over almost two decades |
| Only men with AS |
| Schwartzman | On line recruitment United States | To assess and compare personality traits of adults with and without elevated ASD traits using; the Five Factor Model of personality | Independent sample | Online administration of self-report questionnaires; Sample was not representative of adult population with ASD |
| Vuijk | Expertise Centre for Autism in Netherland | To investigated temperament and character dimensions of men with ASD by individual case matching to a comparison group. |
| Only men with ASD |
| Ozonoff | University Child and Adolescent specialized clinic in United States | To explore personality and psychopathology in adult with ASD | Independent sample | Small sample size |
| López-Pérez | Four different mental health institutions in Spain | To examine use of different interpersonal ER strategies in BPD and AS compared to normative control participants | ANOVA | Self-reports of interpersonal ER; ToM was not assessed |
| Dudas | CARD, online responders to a website | To compare ASC, BPD, and comorbid patients in terms of autistic traits, empathy, and systemizing | ANOVA | Diagnosis was based on self-report of patients |
| Murphy[ | High security psychiatric care in UK | To compare the ToM performance of three forensic patient groups (AS, Schizophrenia and PD patients) | Kruskal-Wallis H test | No control for the potential influence of medication on cognitive functioning |
| Stanfield | Clinical and support services in Scotland; Nonpsychotic people who had previously participated in the EHRS of schizophrenia | To compare Social Cognition in ASD and SPD using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). | Kruskal- Wallis tests | Small sample size |
| Booules-Katri | Patients and relatives of schizophrenia patients attending psychiatric service at a hospital in Spain; Public advertisements | To compare the ToM performance of a group of HFA and SSPD with a matched HC group |
| SSPD sample consisted of non-clinical individuals |
ADHD: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder; ADI-R: Autism diagnostic interview - revised; ADOS: Autism diagnostic observation schedule-generic; AQ: Autism quotient; AS: Asperger Syndrome; ASC: Autism spectrum condition; ASD: Autism spectrum disorder; BPD: Borderline personality disorder; Er: emotion regulation; HC: Health control; HFA: High-functioning autism; NCC: Non-clinical controls; NEO-PI-R: NEO personality inventory revised; NPD: Narcissistic personality disorder; PD: Personality disorder; SPD: Schizotypal personality disorder; SSPD: Schizotypal-schizoid personality disorder; SUD: Substance use disorder; ToM: Theory of mind.
Summary of included studies exploring comorbid personality disorders diagnosis (according to DSM-IV) in autism spectrum disorder patients
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| Ketelaars |
| AQ, SCAN-2.1 | IPDE | > 50% |
| Rydén and Bejerot[ |
| SCID-I, WAIS III, ASSQ, ASDI, ASRS, MADRS,Y-BOCS, GAF, CGI-S, WRAADDS | SCID-II screen; SPP | > 40% |
| Hofvander |
| WAIS-R or WAIS-IIISCID-I, ASDI | SCID-II | 62% |
| Lugnegård |
| WAIS-III, DISCOS-11AQ | SCID-II or a structured DSM-IV-based clinical interview | 48% |
| Strunz |
| ADOS, ADI-R, MINI, SCID-I, DAPP-BQ,NEO-PI-R | SCID-II | 45% |
| Geurts and Jansen[ |
| Former DSM-IV Axis I diagnosis reported | Former DSM-IV Axis II diagnosis reported | 15% |
| Anckarsäter |
| SCID-I, ASDI, Y-BOCS; ASHFAQ, TCI | SCID- II | 75% |
ADHD: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder; ADI-R: Autism Diagnostic interview-revised; ADOS: Autism diagnostic observation schedule-generic; AS: Asperger syndrome; ASD: Autism spectrum disorder; ASDI: Asperger syndrome diagnostic interview; ASHFAQ: Asperger syndrome and high-functioning autism screening questionnaire; ASRS: Adult ADHD self-report scale; ASSQ: Autism spectrum disorder in adults screening questionnaire; ASDI: Asperger syndrome diagnostic interview; AQ: Autism spectrum quotient; CGI-S: Clinical global impression severity of illness; DAPP-BQ: Dimensional assessment of personality pathology; DISCOS-11: Diagnostic interview for social an communication disorder; GAF: Global assessment of functioning; HFA: High-functioning autism; IPDE: International personality disorder examination; MADRS: Montgomery asberg depression rating scale; MINI: Mini international neuropsychiatric interview; NEO-PI-R: Neo personality inventory revised; PDD-NOS: Pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified; SCAN-2.1: Schedules for clinical assessment in neuropsychiatry; SCID-I: Structured clinical interview for DSM-IV axis I disorders; SCID-II: Structured clinical interview for DSM-IV personality disorders; SPP: Swedish universities scales of personality; TCI: Temperament and character inventory; Y-BOCS: Yale -brown obsessive compulsive scale; WAIS-R: Wechsler adult intelligence scale-revised; WAIS-III: Wechsler adult intelligence scale-III; WRAADDS: Wender-reimherr adult attention deficit disorder scale.
Specific personality disorders (Structured clinical interview for DSM-IV axis II diagnosis) prevalence in autism spectrum disorder samples
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| Paranoid | 0% | 19% | 25.5 % ASD; 25.9% ASD + ADHD | 2% |
| Schizoid | 26% | 13% | 31.9% ASD; 22.2% ASD + ADHD | 36% |
| Schizotypal | 2% | 21% | 23.4% ASD; 11.1% ASD + ADHD | 0% |
| Antisocial | 0% | 3% | 0% ASD; 18.5% ASD + ADHD | 0% |
| Histrionic | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% |
| Borderline | 0% | 9% | 10.6% ASD; 14.8% ASD + ADHD | 0% |
| Narcissistic | 0% | 3% | 6.4%ASD; 3.7% ASD + ADHD | 0% |
| Avoidant | 13% | 25% | 34% ASD; 11.1% ASD + ADHD | 2% |
| Obsessive-compulsive | 19% | 32% | 42.6% ASD; 29.6% ASD + ADHD | 17% |
| Dependent | 0% | 5% | 8.5% ASD; 22.2% ASD + ADHD | 0% |
PD: Personality disorders; ASD: Autism spectrum disorder; ADHD: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.
Summary of studies using temperament character inventory to evaluate personality in adults with autism spectrum disorder
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| Anckarsäter |
| Age and sex matched group | SCID-I; ASDI; Y-BOCS; ASHFAQ; TCI | TCI; SCID-II | Lower NS, RD, SD, C; Higher HA; Cluster A and Cluster C PD were common |
| Soderstrom |
| Age and sex matched group | WAIS-III | TCI | Higher HA ST; Lower NS, RD, SD, C |
| Sizoo |
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| ADI-R; ADOS; DSM-IV criteria checklists; WAIS-III | VTCI | Higher HA, ST; Lower RD, SD, C; Lower NS and RD for ASD without SUD; Higher P for subgroups with current or past SUD |
| Vuijk |
| Matched comparison group (age, education, marital status) | TCI | Higher HA, lower NS, RD, SD, C | |
| Helles |
| Within comparison group (no longer ASD/ASD pure/ASD plus) | GAFWAIS-IIIASDI; BDI; ASRS | TCI | Higher RD in no longer ASD; Higher HA, lower NS in ASD pure; Higher HA, lower C, SD in ASD plus |
C: Cooperativeness; HA: Harm avoidance; NC: Neurotypical controls; NS: Novelty Seeking; P: Persistence; RD: Reward dependence; SD: Self-directedness; ST: Self-transcendence; SUD: Substance use disorder; SUD: No history of SUD; VTCI: Short version of temperament character inventory.
Summary of studies measuring big five personality traits in adults with autism spectrum disorder
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| Schwartzman |
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| RAADS-R | IPIP-NEO-120 | Neuroticism was positively correlated with ASD symptomatology; Extraversion, openness to experience, conscientiousness, and agreeableness were negatively correlated with ASD; About 70% of the variance in RAADS-R scores accounted for by the IPIP-NEO-120 facets. A great variability in personality traits emerged in the elevated ASD traits group with four distinct clusters of FFM personality types |
| Schriber |
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| WAIS; ADOS G | BFI | Higher Neuroticism Lower Openness to experience, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness |
| Kanai |
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| AQ; HADS; L-SAS | NEO-FFI | AQ, HADS, and L-SAS were significantly higher in AS than in control. Higher Neuroticism, Lower Extraversion, Agreeableness, Conscientiousness AQ correlated with the subscale scores of HADS and NEO-FFI in AS |
| Strunz |
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| SCID-I/MINI | NEO-PI-R; DAPP BQ; SCID-II | On the NEO-PI-R: Conscientiousness: NCC = ASD > BPD and NPD Neuroticism: NCC < ASD = NPD < BPD; Extraversion: ASD < BPD, NPD, NCCOpenness for experience: ASD < NCC, BPD, NPDAgreeableness: ASD = BPD and NPD > NCCOn the DAPP-BQ: Inhibitedness: ASD = BPD > NCC and NPD Dissocial Behaviour: NCC = ASD < BPD and NPD; Emotional dysregulation: NCC < ASD = NPD < BPD Compulsivity: ASD > BPD, NPD, NCC |
| Hesselmark |
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| MINI | NEOPI-R | Satisfactory internal consistency of the NEOPI-R. Neuroticism correlated with psychiatric comorbidity in ASD group |
BFI: Big five inventory; L-SAS: Liebowitz social anxiety scale; HADS: Hospital anxiety and depression scale; IPIP-NEO-120: International personality item pool representation of the NEO-PI-R; NEO-PI-R: Neo personality inventory revised.
Summary of studies using different assessment measures to evaluate personality in adults with autism spectrum disorder
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| Ozonoff |
| 24 NC (age, intelligence and gender matched college students) | WAIS-R | MMPI-2 | Higher Depression, Social Introversion, Social Discomfort, Repression and PSY-5 scale Introversion |
| Kanai |
| 57 NC | WAIS-R | SPQEPQ | SPQ: AS>NC; SPQ subscale scores (unusual perceptual experiences, odd behaviour, and suspiciousness) were correlated with total scores of the AQ in the AS group; Higher ‘Neuroticism’ and ‘Psychoticism’; Lower ‘Extraversion’ and ‘Lie’ |
EPQ: Eysenck personality questionnaire; MMPI-2: Minnesota multiphasic personality inventory; SPQ: Schizotypal personality questionnaire.
Studies comparing autism spectrum disorder patients with personality disorders patients on different assessment measures
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| Strunz | 59 ASD (83% AS, 17% HFA) | 62 NPD, 80 BPD, 106 NC | NEO-PI-R; DAPP BQ; SCID-I/MINI; SCID-II | On the NEO-PI-R: Conscientiousness: NCC = ASD > BPD and NPD; Neuroticism: NCC < ASD = NPD < BPD; Extraversion: ASD < BPD, NPD, NCC; Openness for experience: ASD < NCC, BPD, NPD; Agreeableness: ASD = BPD and NPD > NCC; on the DAPP-BQ; Inhibitedness: ASD = BPD > NCC and NPD; Dissocial Behaviour: NCC = ASD < BPD and NPD; Emotional dysregulation: NCC < ASD = NPD < BPD; Compulsivity: ASD > BPD, NPD, NCC |
| López-Pérez | 30 AS | 30 BPD60 matched NC | SCID-ISCID-IIEmotion regulation of others and self (two scales: extrinsic affect improvement, extrinsic affect worsening)Interpersonal emotion management | Affect improvement: BPD = AS < NNC; Affect worsening: BPD = AS = NNC; Affect improvement > affect worsening in BPD e NCC; Affect improvement = affect worsening in ASD; Adaptive interpersonal strategies (attention deployment, cognitive change) ASD < BPD and NNC; Maladaptive interpersonal strategies (expressive suppression) ASD > BPD and control. |
| Dudas | 624 ASD | 23 BPD; 16 ASD+ BPD; 2081 NC | AQ; EQ; SQR; SCID-II | AQ: NC |
| Murphy[ | 39 AS; Male forensic patients detained in high security psychiatric care | 39 PD (antisocial and/or borderline)39 SC with positive symptoms detained in high security psychiatric care | WAIS-R; ToM measures | IQ PD = AS > SC; AS and SC performed worse on two ToM measures (the Revised Eyes Task and the second order mental representation stories) |
| Stanfield | 28 ASD | 21 SPD; 10 CM; 33 NC | ADOS-G; SCID-II; PANSS; WAISsocial judgment taskEkmann 60 facies task; fRMI task of social judgement | SPD = CM = ASD < controls on social judgment task and Ekman 60-Faces Test; on positive symptoms: ASD < SPD = CM; on negative symptoms ASD = SPD > CM; fRMI: hyperactivation in SPD and CM group compared to ASD was found in the amygdala and the cerebellum |
| Booules-Katri | 35 HFA | SSPD ( | O-LIFE questionnaire; SCID-I; SCID-II; ADI-R; ADOS; WAIS-III; ToM test | HFA showed greater impairment and no dissociation between affective and cognitive ToM components; SSPD scored significantly lower on cognitive than affective ToM test |
BPD: Borderline personality disorder; CM: Comorbid group (SPD+ASD); EQ: Empathy quotient; NPD: Narcissistic personality disorder; O-LIFE questionnaire: Short version of the Oxford-Liverpool Inventory of Feelings and Experiences questionnaire; PANSS: Positive and negative syndrome scale; NC: Non clinical control group; SQR: Systemizing quotient revised; SSPD: Schizotypal-schizoid personality disorder; ToM: Theory of mind.