Borderline Personality Disorder Symptoms and Stressful Life Events: An Evaluation of Gene-Environment Interplay
Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is associated with high rates of stressful life events (SLEs). It is unclear whether people who experience SLEs have more BPD symptoms after accounting for the effects of familial risk factors. Our aims in the current study were to 1) create a predictive model o...
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Published in: | Biological psychiatry global open science Vol. 4; no. 6; p. 100390 |
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Main Authors: | , , , |
Format: | Journal Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Elsevier Inc
01-11-2024
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is associated with high rates of stressful life events (SLEs). It is unclear whether people who experience SLEs have more BPD symptoms after accounting for the effects of familial risk factors. Our aims in the current study were to 1) create a predictive model of BPD using stressors across age and contexts and 2) examine whether SLEs resulted in higher levels of BPD symptoms beyond the effects of genetic and environmental risk factors.
The sample comprised 2801 twins from the Norwegian Institute of Public Health Twin Panel. Poisson regression was used to explore which SLEs predicted BPD symptoms. Elastic net penalized regression was conducted to develop a predictive model for SLEs and BPD symptoms. Co-twin control analyses were performed to differentiate between environmental and genetic factors.
SLEs experienced during childhood and adulthood were associated with BPD symptoms. A weighted polyevent risk score explained 22% of the total variation in symptoms. Shared environmental and heritable factors explained 31% and 47% of individual differences in BPD symptomatology, respectively. Measured SLEs explained 42% of the shared environmental risk for BPD. The predictive risk of SLEs for BPD was reduced when shared environmental and genetic factors were accounted for. However, SLEs increased risk of BPD symptoms beyond the effects of shared genetic and environmental factors.
BPD symptomatology following SLEs cannot fully be explained by genetic and shared environmental factors. The SLE-BPD symptoms associations were primarily due to selection by family environments. It is important to identify familial factors that lead to both SLEs and BPD symptoms. SLEs remained associated with BPD symptoms beyond genetic and environmental confounding.
In this study, we sought to examine how stressful life events are associated with risk of borderline personality disorder. In a twin sample, we found that stressful life events were associated with risk of Borderline Personality Disorder symptoms in young adulthood when genetic and shared environmental confounding were accounted for. This could indicate that tressful life events in part have a causal influence on Borderline Personality Disorder symptoms. |
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ISSN: | 2667-1743 2667-1743 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.bpsgos.2024.100390 |