Treating depression in patients with borderline personality disorder: clinical clues on the use of antidepressants
Treating depression in patients with borderline personality disorder: clinical clues on the use of antidepressants

Treating depression in patients with borderline personality disorder: clinical clues on the use of antidepressants

Ann Gen Psychiatry. 2024 May 30;23(1):21. doi: 10.1186/s12991-024-00507-z.

ABSTRACT

Personality disorders (PD) are described as enduring patterns of markedly deviant and pervasive inner experiences and behaviors, with onset in adolescence, which lead to severe distress or impairment. Patients suffering from major depressive disorder (MDD) display higher rates of comorbidity with personality disorders, often complicating the treatment, and worsening the outcomes. Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is the most common of PD and is frequently associated with MDD, with which shares several features. The most part of research agrees on the fact that comorbid BPD in MDD patients quite doubles the poor response to treatments. Moreover, no treatment strategy stands out currently to emerge as more effective in these cases, thus urging the call for the need of new approaches. Herein, we revise the current literature on BPD, its neurobiology and comorbidity with MDD, as well as the more recent treatment strategies used. Then, based on its pharmacology, we propose a possible role of trazodone as a valuable tool to approach comorbid BPD-MDD.

PMID:38816843 | DOI:10.1186/s12991-024-00507-z