Evaluation of the Effectiveness of the Clarification-Oriented Psychotherapy in Persons with a Narcissistic Personality Disorder According to DSM-IV - A Naturalistic Longitudinal Study with Pre-Post Design

The treatment of patients diagnosed with a narcissistic personality disorder (NPS) is considered to be extra challenging. Well-controlled studies on the effectiveness of psychotherapy in NPS patients are not available; so many interventions are based on theoretical constructs. The clarification-orie...

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Published inFortschritte der Neurologie-Psychiatrie
Main Authors Müller, Gregor, Sachse, Rainer, Langer, Katja, Claus, Benedikt Bernd, Bonnet, Udo
Format Journal Article
LanguageGerman
Published Germany 01.09.2022
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Summary:The treatment of patients diagnosed with a narcissistic personality disorder (NPS) is considered to be extra challenging. Well-controlled studies on the effectiveness of psychotherapy in NPS patients are not available; so many interventions are based on theoretical constructs. The clarification-oriented psychotherapy (COP) is a psychotherapeutic approach, which emerged from concepts of the cognitive behavioral therapy, client-centered psychotherapy and various process-oriented procedures. The present ambulatory therapy-evaluation of COP aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of a psychotherapeutic treatment for patients suffering from NPS.  Retrospective cohort-study including 173 treatment-seeking NPS-patients. Via pre-post per-protocol-analysis, significant improvements mostly with medium effect sizes were found in all relevant parameters after completion of the COP (58.6±10.5 sessions). In particular, the ambitious/narcissistic personality style in the "Personality Style and Disorders Inventory (PSSI)" (primary outcome) was improved (medium effect size: d=-0.49 [-0.67; -0.31], 0.001). Analyses revealed even high effect sizes in terms of the improvement of depressive "states" and "traits", neuroticism as well as self-acceptance. The lowest effect sizes however were found for improvements in self-regulation (d=0.2 [0.03; 0.36], =0.02).  As no intention-to-treat analysis has been carried out, the effect sizes of COP in the treatment of NPS might be overestimated. Nevertheless, our findings support the use of COP for the treatment of NPS. In light of evidence-based medicine, the present so far most comprehensive study on this topic warranted an increase of the evidence of COP in the treatment of NPS from level IV to level III.
ISSN:1439-3522
DOI:10.1055/a-1771-6165