Research displays that mentalizing dysfunctions are related to different psychiatric conditions such as schizophrenia spectrum disorders (1), bipolar disorder (2), eating disorder (3), depression (4), and borderline personality disorder (BPD) (5-7) suggesting that reduced mentalization is associated with both internalizing as well as externalizing psychopathology.
According to the mentalization-based model of BPD, the core pathology underlying BPD is associated with dysfunctions in mentalizing (7) and thus lie at the foundation of disturbances in interpersonal relations, impulsivity and affective instability that is part of the BPD concept (8-10), and is empirically supported in various studies (5,11). In fact, BPD is reported as the most severe psychiatric disorder compared to other clinical groups among adolescents (12). Furthermore, Chanen et al. in a study found that BPD consequently predicts both psychopathology and general psychological function over and above disruptive behavior, Axis I disorders, and other personality disorders (PD) (12). With reference to Achenbach’s dimensional understanding of symptoms, BPD is found to be a highly significant predictor of internalizing problems together with other PDs, mood and anxiety disorders as well as externalizing problems such as disruptive behavior disorders and substance use (12,13). Thus, the psychological, behavioral and social functioning are highly affected in patients with BPD. Findings show that enhancing the capacity to mentalize alleviates BPD symptomatology (14). Hence, mentalization seems to be the mechanism of chance in BPD treatment in adolescents. However, little is known about the effect of mentalizing in regard to externalizing and internalizing psychopathology in BPD patients.
In sum, the literature suggests that dysfunctional mentalizing is linked to a range of psychiatric disorders representing both internalizing vis-a-vis externalizing psychopathology, including BPD. Sparse, however, important research has shown BPD to be a significant predictor of both externalizing and internalizing psychopathology, but to our knowledge no study has investigated the potential role of mentalizing as the mediator between borderline personality features and both internalizing and externalizing psychopathology in a clinical sample of adolescents. Thus, the model we propose is that diminished mentalizing in adolescents with borderline personality features is responsible for externalizing and internalizing psychopathology. The model is in line with other studies investigating mentalization as the underlying core feature in different kinds of psychopathologies (e.g., 1,4). Hence, the focus in this study is not on the widely known developmental psychopathology model of BPD (15) but on adolescents with borderline personality features with comorbid internalizing and externalizing psychopathologies. The potential finding could have important clinical implication, in the sense that targeting mentalizing in regard to BPD not only reduces borderline personality features as research has shown (16), but might also be responsible for a reduction in externalizing and internalizing psychopathology in BPD patients.
Data were collected from 109 patients aged 13 to 18 years referred to a Danish child and adolescent psychiatric clinic for the purpose of diagnostic assessment. As part of standard assessment, the patients also filled out self-report questionnaires measuring borderline features, mentalization, and general psychopathology. Sociodemographic features of the participants are presented in Table 1.
Sociodemographic characteristics of the total sample
Sociodemographic characteristics | Total sample ( |
---|---|
Age (Mean +/− SD) | 16.1 ± 1.1 |
Range in years | 13–18 |
Gender | |
Male | 44 (40.4%) |
Female | 65 (59.6%) |
Educational level | |
Primary School | 55 (50.5%) |
High School | 18 (16.5%) |
Youth Education | 14 (12.8%) |
None | 22 (20.2%) |
Upbringing | |
Both parents | 59 (54.1%) |
Mother | 44 (40.4%) |
Father | 2 (1.8%) |
Foster care | 4 (3.7%) |
Current living arrangements | |
Parents | 89 (81.7%) |
Apartment | 2 (1.8%) |
Foster care | 18 (16.5%) |
Civil Status | |
Single | 77 (61.5%) |
In a relationship | 42 (38.5%) |
Job-status (beside school) | |
In a job | 31 (38.4%) |
Not in a job | 78 (71.6%) |
First we conducted bivariate and correlational analysis of the self-reporting questionnaires. Then we conducted simple mediation analyses to examine whether mentalizing abilities mediated the relationship between borderline features and externalizing and internalizing psychopathology. In line with the recommendations of Hayes (21) for causal step analyses, we conducted Structural Equation Modeling (SEM). SEM provides a direct effect, an indirect effect, and a total effect. When assessing mediation, it is important to make a distinction between the various effects and their corresponding weights. The total effect (weight c) of an independent variable (IV) on the dependent variable (DV) is composed of a direct effect (c’) of IV on DV and an indirect effect (weight
First, we conducted bivariate and correlational analysis of the self-report questionnaire. The bivariate correlations indicated that more borderline pathology was correlated with increased dysfunctional mentalization and internalizing and externalizing psychopathology (see Table 2).
Bivariate correlations between main study variables
Variables | BPFS-C | RFQ-Y | YSR-Externalizing | YSR-Internalizing |
---|---|---|---|---|
BPFS-C | 1.00 | |||
RFQ-Y | −0.72** [−0.80, −0.62] | 1.00 | ||
YSR-Externalizing | 0.68** [0.55, 0.80] | −0.65** [−0.74, −0.54] | 1.00 | |
YSR-Internalizing | 0.73** [0.64, 0.81] | −0.63** [−0.71, −0.53] | 0.43** [0.24, 0.61] | 1.00 |
We conducted two mediation analyses to determine whether mentalizing mediated the relationship between borderline personality features and internalizing and externalizing psychopathology (see Table 3). The analyses revealed a significant total effect size of borderline personality features on externalizing psychopathology (total effect = 0.45,
Summary of mediation analyses with borderline personality feature, mentalization, and externalizing and internalizing psychopathology
Independent variable (IV) | Mediating variable ( | Dependent variable (DP) | Effect of IV on | Effect of | Indirect effect ( | 95% CI Lower Upper | Direct effect ( | Total effect ( |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BPFS-C | RFQ-Y | YSR (ext.) | −0.057* | −2.74* | 0.16* | 0.07, 0.26 | 0.26* | 0.45* |
BPFS-C | RFQ-Y | YSR (int.) | −0.057* | −2.0* | 0.11* | 0.04, 0.21 | 0.42* | 0.54* |
In this study, we sought to explore in a clinical sample of adolescents, whether mentalization mediated the relationship between borderline personality features and internalizing and externalizing psychopathology. The bivariate and correlational analyses of the self-reporting questionnaires were all significant showing that the more borderline personality features the more psychopathology and less mentalization (Table 2). The three forms of psychopathology overlap to a considerable degree. This fact is addressed in the literature through the HiTOP approach (24) and furthermore by Caspi et al. (25) introducing the
The results also display a quite small effect of borderline personality features on mentalization. This is probably due to the fact that half the patients met sub-threshold criteria for BPD whereas the other part met full criteria for BPD. Thus, the effect of borderline personality features on mentalization is smaller than the other effects. A large effect might probably have been the case if all patients had higher BPD scores. Even though the effect is small, it is still significant and relevant.
The results from the mediation analyses revealed that mentalization mediated the relationship between borderline personality features and psychopathology across the internalizing-externalizing spectrum (Table 3). Moreover, the mediation analysis showed that mentalization accounted for 45% of the total effect size of the association between borderline personality features and externalizing psychopathology (Figure 1) and 54% of the total effect size of the association between borderline personality features and internalizing psychopathology (Figure 2), proposing that the relationship between borderline personality features and psychopathology is partially driven by impaired mentalization.
We did expect that mentalization would mediate the relationship between borderline personality features across the internalizing-externalizing spectrum in that, an increasing amount of research finds mentalization as a mediating factor across different diagnoses (1-4) including BPD (26), and that deficiencies in the ability to understand mental states are thought to be affected in many forms of psychopathology (27,28). Though many psychiatric disorders can be organized on the internalizing-externalizing spectrum, it has been discussed how BPD fits into this model. The available literature indicates that BPD is highly comorbid with major depression, dysthymia, and anxiety disorders on the internalizing spectrum as well as antisocial personality disorder, substance use disorders, and conduct disorder on the externalizing spectra (e.g. 29,30). Similarly, findings from two factor analytic studies demonstrate that BPD lie at the junction of externalizing and internalizing pathology (31,32). In support of the findings, Ha et al. (33) display that adolescents with BPD score higher on the YSR than controls. However, BPD is comorbid with, but not fully explained by, internalizing and externalizing psychopathology (32) and internalizing and externalizing psychopathology is argued to be developmental antecedents of BPD (34). Finally, Sharp (15) emphasizes in their paper examining the relationship between BPD, internalizing and externalizing psychopathology in adolescents “[…] that borderline disorder seems to denote unique disorder beyond internalizing and externalizing disorders despite high rates of comorbidity is further supported by longitudinal studies in adolescents” (p. 673).
In line with the results from the current study, the findings are of clinical relevance whereby targeting mentalization can ameliorate psychopathology precipitated by borderline personality features. Thus, it can be suggested that reducing borderline personality features and psychopathology symptoms in general might be achieved by addressing treatment directly at the functional level of mentalization. The hypothesis is in line with Fonagy and Luyten’s mentalization-based approach to the understanding and treatment of BPD (7). In sum, we know from extant literature that enhancing mentalization reduces borderline pathology in BPD patients, but this study suggests that working on mentalization might also reduce externalizing and internalizing psychopathology in patients with BPD, suggesting a transdiagnostic character of mentalizing.
Moreover, the fact that borderline personality features predict psychopathology in this study is consistent with the findings from Chanen et al. (12). More research is needed to confirm the results from our study, since it is the first study empirically examining the relationship between borderline personality features and psychopathology in adolescents through mentalization as a mediator. The results are important in several ways in that, the findings contribute to the understanding of BPD in adolescents as well as it has substantial implications for treatment.
Several limitations of the current study should be acknowledged. First, all measures are based on self-report questionnaires and therefore subject to shared method variance. In addition to this point, it is an important issue having patients with diminished mentalizing self-report on their own capacity to mentalize, and it would have been more adequate with and experimental measure of mentalizing. However, research has shown good correlation between self-reported RF and AAI-based RF (35). Second, the design is cross-sectional and correlational in nature and therefore, the results should be interpreted with care. Third, the small sample size did not allow us to robustly test the potential effect between adolescents who met full criteria for BPD compared to those who only met sub-threshold criteria. Neither did analyses of potential effect of gender or age. Despite the aforementioned limitations, the study provides the first empirical evidence of mentalization as a mediating marker between borderline personality features and internalizing and externalizing psychopathology in adolescents.