e final Programme third International congress on borderline Personality Disorder and allied Disorders

Transcription

e final Programme third International congress on borderline Personality Disorder and allied Disorders
e final Programme
third International congress on borderline
Personality Disorder and allied Disorders
Tailoring treatments to different developmental
pathways and phenomenologies
16 – 18 october 2014
sheraton roma Hotel & conference center // rome, Italy
European Society for the Study of
Personality Disorders
www.esspd.eu
www.borderline-congress.org
table of contents
Page
3 Welcome Addresses
6
Congress Organisation
7
Format Descriptions
8
CME Courses, Thursday, 16 October 2014
9
Scientifc Programme, Thursday, 16 October 2014
17
Scientific Programme, Friday, 17 October 2014
30
Scientific Programme, Saturday, 18 October 2014
34
Poster Presentations
42
Congress Information
45
Index of Chairpersons, Authors and Co-Authors
ee Accredited by the European Council for Continuing Medical Education (EACCME) with 14 CME credits
for the Congress and 3 CME credits for the CME Courses.
Congress President
Anthony W. Bateman, United Kingdom
President ESSPD
President Local Organizing Committee
Cesare Maffei, Italy
President of the Scientific Committee
Andrea Fossati, Italy
Scientific Committee
Anthony Bateman, United Kingdom
Martin Bohus, Germany
Cesare Maffei, Italy
Christian Schmahl, Germany
Congress Venue
Sheraton Roma Hotel & Conference Center
Viale Del Pattinaggio 100
00144 Rome, Italy
2
Congress and Exhibition Office
Office Hamburg
Hanser & Co GmbH
Zum Ehrenhain 34
D-22885 Barsbüttel, Germany
Email: borderline2014@cpo-hanser.de
Organizer
ESSPD
European Society for the Study of Personality Disorders
KIP/Trimbos-Instituut
Postbox 725
3500 AS Utrecht, The Netherlands
welcome address
Dear Colleagues,
I am delighted to welcome so many people to the third conference of our organisation, the
European Society for the Study of Personality Disorder (ESSPD). In particular I extend a
warm welcome to people from outside Europe who have travelled far to join us although
of course I extend a similarly warm welcome to those of you from Europe! The ESSPD
has come to Rome this year, hoping to build on our highly successful conferences held in
Berlin and Amsterdam. We are looking forward to an excellent programme which surely
will meet our organisational aims of furthering research and increasing health service
and public interest in personality disorder. It is a tribute to our members and Board of the
ESSPD that there are so many of you who have been to the previous conferences and we
hope that you will make the ESSPD conference a regular date in your diaries every two
years. In the interim years we have a smaller clinically-based conference with extended
workshops. Next year in June 2015 this will be held in Tallinn, Estonia. Further details are
available on our website.
I would like to thank Cesare Maffei for his support as Chair of the conference committee and
Andrea Fossati who organised the scientific programme. I am sure that you will agree that
there is something of interest to everyone and, given our difficulties in choosing between
the submissions, the programme is of a high scientific standard. In the scientific sessions
we wish to promote discussion and I hope that many of you will feel free to question and
to approach speakers during the breaks. Don’t be shy – a good conference is made by
scientific discussion, networking, meeting people with similar interests, and learning from
others. As an organisation we want to stimulate interest in personality disorder from young
people and we have again awarded a young researcher prize. Make sure that you come
to the award ceremony.
I look forward to meeting you at the conference and please stop me to give me your views at
any time. This will be my last conference as ESSPD President and I would like to thank the
ESSPD Board for all their support over the past 3 – 4 years. The organisation is flourishing
and we can look forward to successful meetings in the coming years.
Anthony W. Bateman, United Kingdom
President European Society for the Study of Personality Disorders
3
WELCOME ADDRESSES
Dear Colleagues,
On behalf of the Scientific Committee, I am delighted to welcome you to Rome for the
3rd ESSPD Congress on Borderline Personality Disorder and Allied Disorders. I hope that
you will not mind if I share with you a couple of my professional memories. When I was
a young trainee in Clinical Psychology in the early ‘90s a lot of experts questioned the
possibility of effectively treating BPD; at that time, even the existence of BPD as a personality
disorder was called into question. Twenty years later we have learned that BPD exists, and
prominent experts developed evidence-based strategies which proved to be effective in
treating BPD. Indeed, in the last two decades we learned a lot of things on BPD, although
many aspects of the disorder are still debated. Scientific knowledge suggests that the time
has come to the shed light on the developmental pathways leading to BPD, in order to
explain the possible heterogeneity of BPD clients and to improve further the efficacy of
evidence-based treatments for BPD.
The ESSPD conferences in Berlin and in Amsterdam represented milestones in the
advancement of our knowledge on etiology and treatment of BPD; moreover, they were
also extraordinary occasions for promoting the exchange of information between experts
and participants (as well as among experts and among participants) from all over the world.
Thus, the Scientific Committee of the Rome Conference had the exciting perspective, and
the tremendous responsibility to organize a coherent system of courses, key-note lectures,
symposia, workshops, and poster presentations which was designed to convey the stateof-the-art of the knowledge on BPD and related personality disorders. In our intentions,
key-note lectures should represent for the participants unique occasions to meet, and learn
from top-notch experts in BPD research. Workshops were designed to highlight relevant
topics in the diagnosis and treatment of BPD in order to increase clinicians’ expertise in
the clinical management of BPD clients, whereas symposia were designed to focus on the
hot topics of research on BPD. Finally, we thought of CME courses mostly as hands-on
experiences which should help participants to directly appreciate the basic techniques of
different evidence-based approaches to treating BPD clients.
Of course, only you will be able to tell if the Scientific Committee was up to the task; in
any case, I do wish to thank Anthony Bateman, Martin Bohus, and Christian Schmall for
the terrific work that they did as members of the Scientific Committee. Since the present
congress is taking place in Rome, let me wish you in Latin language that what you are
going to learn from our experts will remain in your professional activity with BPD clients
as monumentum aere perennius (i.e., a masterpiece which will last longer than a bronze
sculpture).
Andrea Fossati, Italy
Chair, Scientific Committee of the
3rd ESSPD Congress on BPD and Allied Disorders
4
Welcome Addresses
Dear Colleagues,
Welcome to Rome! When the Executive Board of the ESSPD asked me to organize this
congress, I felt honored and at the same time aware that I was taking the responsibility
to identify the best town in Italy. In 2003 I organized the 8th ISSPD Congress in Florence
starting from the principle that every scientific congress is identified, and remembered,
with the town where it takes place. If Florence could represent some centuries of the Italian
history and fine arts, that is the Renaissance, it’s a matter of fact that Rome allows people
to run through around 3000 years of human history and civilization.
It’s my personal opinion that, even if the chronological distance between Florence and Rome
is only 11 years, the scientific distance covers not properly millennia, but some centuries.
At that time we had to discuss on “controversial issues in PDs”, now our goal is to refine
our knowledge on individual differences in pathogenesis, diagnosis and treatment.
In other words, it’s like if we moved from the necessity to identify and separate different
kinds of plants or animals to the present responsibility to feed each individual plant or
animal in order to guarantee a healthy and luxuriant growth.
My hope is that the deep historical roots of Rome will facilitate both speakers and attendants
to obtain this result.
I also strongly hope that Rome will attract attendants from continents where the interest
for Personality Disorders is now starting to develop. It’s a promise for future conferences.
Cesare Maffei, Italy
President of the Local Organizing Committee
5
CONGRESS ORGANISATION
Congress President
Anthony W. Bateman, United Kingdom
President ESSPD
President Local Organizing Committee
Cesare Maffei, Italy
Scientific Committee
Chair: Andrea Fossati, Italy
Anthony W. Bateman, United Kingdom
Martin Bohus, Germany
Cesare Maffei, Italy
Christian Schmahl, Germany
Award Committee
Chair: Thomas Rinne, The Netherlands
Arnoud Arntz, The Netherlands
Martin Bohus, Germany
Stephan Doering, Austria
Sigmund Karterud, Norway
Cesare Maffei, Italy
ESSPD Board
President
Anthony W. Bateman, United Kingdom
Vice president
Martin Bohus, Germany
Treasurer
Henk Jan Dalewijk, The Netherlands
Membership coordinator
Stephan Doering, Austria
Website coordinator
Lars Mehlum, Norway
Newsletter coordinator
Thersa Wilberg, Norway
Secretary of the ESSPD office
Ad Kaasenbrood, The Netherlands
Board member
Andrea Fossati, Italy
Foundation president
Thomas Rinne, The Netherlands
6
Selection Procedure of the Awards
Posters have become increasingly important as a
communication medium at congresses. In some areas of
science, for instance in the medical field, posters have
even become the core of the meeting. Indeed, on scientific
conferences poster presentations are an efficient way to
deal with the increasing demand of researchers to display
and discuss their own research with colleagues.
The ESSPD wishes to stimulate this development and to
increase the quality of poster presentations. For this reason
all posters have been peer reviewed. During the congress
a jury of three experts in our field will judge the posters.
All accepted poster presentations are candidates for the
ESSPD poster awards. The poster award jury will evaluate
the posters onsite during the conference and will announce
the winner during the closing ceremony.
The final selection of poster awards will be made on
the basis of the study’s scientific excellence during the
congress. The best 3 posters will receive the 1st , 2nd and
3rd ESSPD poster award valued at € 300, € 200 and €100
respectively.
Format Descriptions
Plenary Sessions (PL)
Duration: 45 min
Eminent experts will present papers on the congress'
main topics.
Key Lecture (KL)
Duration: 90 min
Two eminent experts will present keynote lectures on
"What I have changed my mind about".
Symposia (S)
Duration: 45 or 90 min
Each symposium of the congress is scheduled for 45 or
90 minutes which equals two speakers to four speakers
(e.g. 2 x 20 minutes or 4 x 20 minutes including 2 or 4 x 5
min­utes discussion) chaired by one or two scientists or
clinicians (opening remarks and conclusions).
Workshop (W)
Duration: 45 or 90 minutes
Workshops help to further broaden the participant's ex­
pertise in a particular field of knowledge.
Oral Presentation (OP)
Duration: 10 min + 5 min
The oral presentations have been selected by the Scientific
Committee after abstract submissions had been reviewed.
The 90-minute sessions are grouped by topics and
chaired by selected specialists. The time slot for a single
presentation is 15 minutes including discussion time.
Posters (P)
The posters have been selected by the Scientific Committee
after abstract submissions had been reviewed. The posters
are grouped into thematic poster groups. The poster tours
will give the authors the opportunity to present their
findings and discuss them with the audience.
CME Courses (CME)
Duration: 270 min
10 different CME-courses at an extra cost are offered on
the 16 October 2014. It is not mandatory to register for
the whole congress if you wish to book a CME-course.
ESSPD Workshops on Personality Disorders
Skills Training for Effective Treatments
4 – 6 June 2015 // Tallinn University // Tallinn, Estonia
a First Announcement
SELECTED SESSIONS AND WORKSHOPS
Arnoud Arntz
Schema therapy for personality disorders in general
Anthony Bateman
Mentalization Based Treatment (MBT) for Antisocial
Personality Disorder (ASPD): Introduction to clinical
practice
Martin Bohus
DBT for PTSD related to childhood sexual abuse
in patients with borderline personality disorder –
A multicomponent programme
Giancarlo Dimaggio
Metacognitive interpersonal therapy for avoidant
personality disorder
Ad Kaasenbrood
Social psychiatric management for people with
a personality disorder
Babette Renneberg
Cognitive-behavior therapy of social anxiety and
avoidant personality disorder
More information at: http://www.esspd.eu/congresses/tallinnmeeting2015
7
CME Courses
Thursday, 16 October 2014
CME-Courses
08:30 – 13:00
CME-Courses
08:30 – 13:00
CME-101Room Sforza
CME-106Room Raffaello
Posttraumatic stress disorder and borderline personality
disorder
Chairperson: Martin Bohus, Mannheim, Germany
Dialectical behavioral therapy
Chairperson: Marsha Linehan, Seattle, USA
CME-102Room Orsini
Systems training for emotional predictability and problem
solving
Chairperson: Nancee Blum, Iowa City, USA
CME-107Room Tiziano
Suicide and BPD
Chairperson: Lars Mehlum, Oslo, Norway
CME-108Room Leonardo
CME-103Room Colonna Doria
Transference-focused psychotherapy
Chairperson: Stephan Doering, Vienna, Austria
Starting clinical research
Chairperson: Antonia New, New York, USA
CME-109Room Mantegna
CME-104Room Ludovisi
Mentalisation-based-treatment
Chairperson: Anthony Bateman, London,
United Kingdom
CME-105Room Bentivoglio
General psychiatric management
Chairperson: Adrianus Kaasenbrood, Utrecht,
The Netherlands
ADHD and BPD
Chairperson: Alexandra Philipsen, Freiburg, Germany
CME-110Room Borghese
I Disturbi Metacognitive nel Disturbo Borderline di
Personalità: Valutazione clinica e tecniche di intervento
terapeutico (course in Italian language)
Chairperson: Antonio Semerari, Roma, Italy
13:00 – 13:45 Break
Pre-Registration and payment of CME-Courses fee
is mandatory. Please see also page 42.
Programme Structure
The congress programme is sorted chronologically by days (next page). For better orientation sessions within the scientific
programme are differentiated by colours.
Abbreviations
8
PL
Plenary Session
S
Symposium
KL
Symposium
W
Workshop
OP
P
Oral Presentation
Poster Presentation
scientific programme
Thursday, 16 October 2014
PL-01
Plenary Session
13:45 – 14:30Auditorium Medici / Visconti
Dialectical behaviour therapy adapted for self-harming
and suicidal adolescents with borderline traits
Chairpersons: Martin Bohus, Mannheim, Germany
Speaker:
Lars Mehlum, Oslo, Norway
oo4
The clinical assessment of life functioning: An interview
for assessing the levels of personality functioning scale
based on a semi-structured interview
Morton Hesse, Copenhagen, Denmark
Birgitte Thylstrup
S-03Symposium
PL-02
Plenary Session
14:30 – 15:15Auditorium Medici / Visconti
Emotion dystegelation in BPD – basic research and clinical
consequences
Chairpersons: Cesare Maffei, Milan, Italy
Speaker:
Martin Bohus, Mannheim, Germany
S-01Symposium
15:30 – 17:00Auditorium Medici / Visconti
Assessing DSM-5 level of personality functioning: New
measures and findings
Chairpersons: Johannes Zimmermann, Kassel, Germany
Joost Hutsebaut, Halsteren, The Netherlands
oo1
The latent structure of the DSM-5 level of personality
functioning scale
Johannes Zimmermann, Kassel, Germany
Cord Benecke, Rhea Eschstruth, Lisa Hahn, Alessa
Mathews, Lena Riese, Karina Suermann, Kristin Wenzel,
Eileen Wittmann, Daniel Leising
oo2
Concurrent validity of the level of personality functioning
scale
Tore Buer Christensen, Kristiansand, Norway
Benjamin Hummelen, Tor Erik Nysæter, Sigmund
Karterud, Theresa Wilberg, geir pedersen, Christian
Schluter, Donna Bender, Andrew Skodol
oo3
Development, clinical utility, and preliminary psychometric
evaluation of the semi-structured interview for personality
functioning (stip-5)
Joost Hutsebaut, Halsteren, The Netherlands
Han Berghuis, Hilde de Saeger, Theo Ingenhoven,
Jan Henk Kamphuis
PL-01 / PL-02: Simultaneous translation in Italian language provided.
15:30 – 17:00Room Estensi
Gaining new insight into affective instability and emotion
regulation in daily life
Chairpersons: Ulrich Ebner-Priemer, Karlsruhe, Germany
Timothy Trull, Colombia, USA
oo1
The big five as predictors of momentary emotions and
behavior in borderline personality disorder
Johanna Hepp, Mannheim, Germany
Sean P. Lane, Timothy J. Trull, Ryan W. Carpenter
oo2
Ecological momentary assessment of emotion dys­reg­­u-­­
l­ation, craving, and alcohol use
Timothy Trull, Columbia, USA
Ryan Carpenter, Seungmin Jahng, Sean Lane, Phillip
Wood
oo3
Addressing the association of affective instability,
instability of self-esteem and dysfunctional behavior in
borderline personality disorder in daily life – an e-diary
study
Philip Santangelo, Karlsruhe, Germany
Iris Reinhard, Susanne Koudela-Hamila, Ulrich EbnerPriemer
oo4
Affective instability in BPD: Disorder-specific criterion or
transdiagnostic mechanism?
Ulrich Ebner-Priemer, Karlsruhe, Germany
Philip Santangelo, Marlies Houben, Peter Kuppens,
Christian Stiglmayr, Martin Bohus
9
scientific programme
Thursday, 16 October 2014
S-04Symposium
S-06Symposium
15:30 – 17:00Room Sforza
15:30 – 17:00Room Colonna Doria
Suicide risk assessment and management: Arguing for
evidence-based training across disciplines
Chairpersons: Andre Ivanoff, Seattle, USA
Anthony Dubose, Seattle, USA
Evidence-based psychotherapies of borderline personality
disorder – commonalities and differences
Chairpersons: Klaus Lieb, Mainz, Germany
Jutta Stoffers, Mainz, Germany
oo1
Training in suicide interventions in response to public
health initiatives
Anthony Dubose, Seattle, USA
oo1
The efficacy of psychotherapies in the treatment of
borderline personality disorder – the current evidence base
Klaus Lieb, Mainz, Germany
Jutta Stoffers, Birgit Völlm
oo2
Mental health professionals: Graduate student and
professional training in suicide prevention
Andre Ivanoff, Seattle, USA
oo3
Is standard of care in suicide risk assessment and
management empirically-based?
Marsha Linehan, Seattle, USA
oo4
Mortality among patients with borderline personality
disorder 15-years after DBT
Marie-Luise Zeitler, Mannheim, Germany
Rebekka Knies, Nikolaus Kleindienst, Martin Bohus
oo2
Common and distinct treatment elements of BPD-specific
psychotherapies
Jutta Stoffers, Mainz, Germany
Klaus Lieb
oo3
What makes dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) what it is?
Cesare Maffei, Milan, Italy
oo4
Interpersonal psychotherapy for BPD (IPT-BPD)
Silvio Bellino, Turin, Italy
Paola Bozzatello
S-05Symposium
S-07Symposium
15:30 – 17:00Room Orsini
15:30 – 17:00Room Ludovisi
Refining treatments for borderline personality disorder
in young people – Part 1
Chairpersons: Andrew Chanen, Melbourne, Australia
Louise McCutcheon, Melbourne, Australia
Non-suicidal self-injury – epidemiological and experimental
approaches
Chairpersons: Christian Schmahl, Mannheim, Germany
Alexander Chapman, Vanouver, Canada
oo1
Adolescents with emerging personality pathology and
their close relationships
Christel Hessels, ´s-Hertogenbosch, The Netherlands
oo1
International prevalence and psychosocial correlates of
adolescent self-injury
Michael Kaess, Heidelberg, Germany
Gloria Fischer, Peter Parzer, Franz Resch, Romuald
Brunner
oo2
The sexual health and relationships of youth with
borderline personality pathology
Andrew Chanen, Melbourne, Australia
Katherine Thompson, Martina Jovev, Yolanda Nyathi,
Emma McDougall
oo3
Parental factors and clinical experience with a groupprogramme for parents with a child with BPD
Marieke Schuppert, Groningen, The Netherlands
10
oo2
Implicit associations of non-suicidal self-injury with
emotional relief: The moderating role of emotional context
Alexander Chapman, Vancouver, Canada
Kim Gratz, Katherine Dixon-Gordon, Matthew Tull,
Brianna Turner
scientific programme
Thursday, 16 October 2014
oo3
The role of seeing blood in non-suicidal self-injury – an
experimental approach
Janina Naoum, Mannheim, Germany
Sarah Reitz, Christian Schmahl
oo2
Traits and behaviors of older adults with personality
disorders and the special challenge of transitions between
systems of care
Erlene Rosowsky, Needham, USA
oo4
Conditioning an aversion to cutting stimuli: A new
approach to nonsuicidal self-injury treatment
Joe Franklin, Boston, USA
oo3
Measuring personality functioning in older adults:
Construct validity of the severity indices of personality
functioning – short form
Gina Rossi, Brussel, Belgium
S-08Symposium
15:30 – 17:00Room Bentivoglio
Pharmacotherapy for borderline personality disorder:
What‘s new?
Chairpersons: Theo Ingenhoven, Lunteren,
The Netherlands
Kenneth Silk, Ann Arbor, USA
oo1
If any, what to prescribe?
Theo Ingenhoven, Lunteren, The Netherlands
oo2
Shared decision making: How to prescribe pharma­
cotherapy in personality disordered patients
René Bouwman, Alkmaar, The Netherlands
oo3
Quality of prescribing and physical health monitoring for
people with personality disorder
Rahil Sanatinia, London, United Kingdom
S-09Symposium
15:30 – 17:00Room Raffaello
Personality disorders in older adults
Chairpersons: Bas van Alphen, Heerlen, The Netherlands
Erlene Rosowsky, Needham, USA
S-10Symposium
15:30 – 17:00Room Tiziano
Rejection sensitivity, interpersonal difficulties and social
cognition in borderline personality pathology
Chairpersons: John Clarkin, New York, USA
Chiara de Panfilis, Parma, Italy
oo1
Interpersonal profiles associated with rejection sensitivity
Nicole Cain, Brooklyn, USA
Chiara De Panfilis, Kevin Meehan, John Clarkin
oo2
The interplay between effortful control and rejection
sensitivity in borderline personality pathology
Kevin Meehan, Brooklyn, USA
Chiara De Panfilis, Nicole Cain, John Clarkin
oo3
Perceived rejection and unrealistic expectations of social
inclusion in borderline personality disorder
Chiara De Panfilis, Parma, Italy
Paolo Riva, Emanuele Preti, Chiara Cabrino, Carlo
Marchesi
oo4
Cross-modal emotion recognition and borderline
personality traits
Emanuele Preti, Milan, Italy
Chiara Suttora, Juliette Richetin, Alberto Pisani
oo1
Effects of schema group therapy in older outpatients
Arjan Videler, Hilvarenbeek, The Netherlands
11
scientific programme
Thursday, 16 October 2014
S-11Symposium
W-07Workshop
15:30 – 17:00Room Borghese
15:30 – 17:00Room Mantegna
The Emila Romagna guidance on severe personality
disorders treatment
Chairpersons: Michele Sanza, Cesena, Italy
Domenico Berardi, Bologna, Italy
Advances in treatment of narcissistic personality disorder
Chairpersons: Elsa Ronningstam, Belmont, USA
Igor Weinberg, Belmont, USA
oo1
Therapeutic contract and severe personality disorders
Claudio Ravani, Forlì, Italy
Gloria Samory
oo2
Transition to adult mental health services of adolescent
with personality disorder traits
Stefano Costa, Cesena, Italy
oo3
Analysis of treatment resource utilization of severe
personality disorders in Emilia Romagna
Alessio Saponaro, Bologna, Italy
Enrico Semrov
oo4
Assessment of severe personality disorders in a research
perspective
Marco Menchetti, Bologna, Italy
Francesca Martino
oo1
Recent empirical data directing treatment strategies
Stefan Roepke, Berlin, Germany
oo2
Dos and Donts in treatment of NPD patients
Igor Weinberg, Belmont, USA
oo3
A collaborative exploratory approach to treatment of
pathological narcissism and narcissistic personality
disorder
Elsa Ronningstam, Belmont, USA
oo4
Attachment and sexuality in patients with narcissistic
disorders
Diana Diamond, New York, USA
17:00 – 17:15 Break
S-12Symposium
W-06Workshop
15:30 – 17:00Room Leonardo
Treating the untreated: The engagement and treatment
of seriously mental Ill people with a personality disorder
Chairpersons: Adrianus Kaasenbrood, Utrecht,
The Netherlands
Martin Steendam, Utrecht, The Netherlands
oo1
Recommendations for people with SMI-PD
Steendam Martin, Utrecht, The Netherlands
oo2
Yes we can: The treatment of people with SMI-PD
Saskia Knapen, Zeist, The Netherlands
oo3
Management of suicidal behavior
Bert van Luijn, Utrecht, The Netherlands
oo4
Involving those who are involved
Erwin van Meekeren, The Hague, The Netherlands
12
17:15 – 18:45Auditorium Medici / Visconti
Drop out among borderline patients in clinical practice
Chairpersons: Lionel Cailhol, Québec, Canada
Pierre David, Québec, Canada
oo1
Predictors of drop-out during intensive dialectical
behavior therapy
Paco Prada, Geneva, Switzerland
Rosetta Nicastro, Karen Dieben, Nader Perroud
oo2
Treatment drop-out after hospitalization in a French sample
of borderline personality disordered forensic patients
Anne-Hélène Moncany, Toulouse, France
Bénédicte Jullian, Nicolas Job, Benoit Piget, Walter
Albardier, Gérard Laurencin
oo3
Predictors of drop-out during MBT and DBT
Frédéric Perusse, Montreal, Canada
oo4
Literature review and clinical considerations
Pierre David, Québec, Canada
Lionel Cailhol, Félix-Antoine Berube
scientific programme
Thursday, 16 October 2014
S-13Symposium
17:15 – 18:45Room Estensi
Emotion processing in borderline personality disorder
Chairpersons: Christian Schmahl, Mannheim, Germany
Carla Sharp, Houston, USA
oo1
Meaningful non-significance: A powerful test of borderline
personality and the negativity bias in emotion perception
Johanna Hepp, Mannheim, Germany
Benjamin E. Hilbig, Pascal J. Kieslich, Julia Herzog,
Stefanie Lis, Christian Schmahl, Inga Niedtfeld
oo2
Effects of oxytocin on social cognition and empathy in
women with borderline personality disorder
Nicole Ower, Freiburg, Germany
Bernadette von Dawans, Isabel Dziobek, Gregor Domes,
Alexandra Philipsen, Markus Heinrichs
oo3
Environmental invalidation, emotion regulation and BPD
in adolescents
Carla Sharp, Houston, USA
oo4
Undifferentiated negative affect and impulsivity in
borderline personality disorder
Timothy Trull, Columbia, USA
Rachel Tomko, Sean Lane
S-14Symposium
17:15 – 18:45Room Tiziano
Borderline personality disorder: The impact of blind spots
on social functioning and physical health
Chairpersons: Thomas Oltmanns, St. Louis, USA
Steve Balsis, College Station, USA
oo1
See the world through the lens of borderline personality
disorder: Interpersonal perception processes underlying
BPD
Erika Carlson, Toronto, Canada
oo2
Does borderline personality disorder reflect a single
specific disorder? The elusive evidence from factor
analyses
Johannes Zimmermann, Kassel, Germany
Daniel Leising, Aidan G. C. Wright
oo3
Informant vs. self report: Which perspective provides
more information about the latent borderline continuum?
Steve Balsis, College Station, USA
Thomas Oltmanns
oo4
Seeing the world through the lens of borderline personality
disorder: Interpersonal perception processes underlying
BPD
Thomas Oltmanns, Saint Louis, USA
Erika Carlson
oo5
Services utilization by patients with severe personality
disorders in Emilia Romagna
Michele Sanza, Cesena, Italy
Alessio Saponaro
S-15Symposium
17:15 – 18:45Room Leonardo
Borderline personality disorder and psychotic symptoms
Chairperson: Christina Slotema, The Hague,
The Netherlands
oo1
The cognitive-perceptual factor of schizotypal personality
disorder is related to borderline personality disorder, the
oddness factor is not
Benjamin Hummelen, Oslo, Norway
Theresa Wilberg, Geir Pedersen, Sigmund Karterud
oo2
Psychotic symptoms in youth with borderline personality
disorder versus first-episode psychosis
Andrew Chanen, Melbourne, Australia
Felix-Antoine Berube, Martina Jovev, Jennifer Betts, Hok
Pan Yuen, Richard Kerslake, Michael Kaess
oo3
Hallucinations in borderline personality disorder: Preva­
lence and association with trauma
Christina Slotema, The Hague, The Netherlands
oo4
Cognitive functioning in patients with borderline per­
sonality disorder and auditory verbal hallucinations
Christina Slotema, The Hague, The Netherlands
13
scientific programme
Thursday, 16 October 2014
oo5
Phenomenology of psychotic symptoms in borderline
personality disorder versus schizophrenia spectrum or
affective psychotic disorders: A systematic review
Felix-Antoine Berube, Montreal, Canada
Michael Kaess, Jennifer K Betts, Amit Bhaduri, John
Gleeson, Martina Jovev, Richard Kerslake, Andrea Polari,
Henry J Jackson, Andrew Chanen
S-16Symposium
17:15 – 18:45Room Mantegna
Pain processing in borderline personality disorder
Chairpersons: Ulf Baumgaertner, Mannheim, Germany
Melanie Domsalla, Mannheim, Germany
oo1
Pain in psychiatric disorders
Karl-Jürgen Bär, Jena, Germany
oo2
Nociception and pain perception in borderline personality
disorder
Robin Bekrater-Bodmann, Mannheim, Germany
Boo Young Chung, Christian Schmahl, Herta Flor
oo3
Modeling self-injurious behavior using incision pain and
a surrogate
Ulf Baumgaertner, Mannheim, Germany
Polina Shabes, Natalie Schloss, Christian Schmahl, RolfDetlef Treede
oo4
Acute and chronic pain in individuals with borderline
personality disorder traits with and without history of
self-harm
Ryan W. Carpenter, Mannheim, Germany
Timothy Trull
oo5
Physical and social pain: Altered pain processing after
social exclusion in borderline personality disorder
Melanie Domsalla, Mannheim, Germany
Magdalena Schumitz, Georgia Koppe, Lilsa Liebke,
Christian Schmahl, Martin Bohus, Stefanie Lis
14
S-17Symposium
17:15 – 18:45Room Borghese
Gender differences in borderline personality disorder
Chairpersons: Sabine Herpertz, Heidelberg, Germany
Katja Bertsch, Heidelberg, Germany
oo1
Gender differences in BPD over time
Mary Zanarini, Cambridge, Boston, USA
oo2
Gender differences in aggression of patients with BPD
Falk Mancke, Heidelberg, Germany
Sabine Herpertz, Katja Bertsch
oo3
Affect regulation in borderline personality disorder:
Gender differences in emotional processing and reactions
Katja Bertsch, Heidelberg, Germany
Natalie Izurieta, Krisztina Nagy, Andrea Gaebel, Falk
Mancke, Dorothee Gescher, Sabine Herpertz
oo4
Gender differences in emotion and psychopathology:
Neural correlates and behavioral findings
Ute Habel, Heidelberg, Germany
W-01Workshop
17:15 – 18:00Room Tivoli
Clinical use of the interview of personality organization
processes in adolescence (Ipop-a) in the assessment of
severely disturbed adolescents
Chairpersons: Massimo Ammaniti, Italy
John Clarkin, New York, USA
oo1
Clinical application of the interview of personality or­
ga­nization processes in adolescence (Ipop-a) in the
assessment of severely disturbed adolescents
Andrea Fontana, Rome, Italy
Audrey Clarkin
oo2
Clinical application of the interview of personality
organization processes in adolescence (IPOP-A) in the
assessment of severely disturbed adolescents
Audrey Clarkin, New York, USA
scientific programme
Thursday, 16 October 2014
W-02Workshop
W-04Workshop
17:15 – 18:00Room Sforza
17:15 – 18:45Room Colonna Doria
Adolescent identity treatment – an integrative approach
for personality pathology in adolescence
Chairpersons: Pamela Foelsch, New York, USA
Klaus Schmeck, Basel, Switzerland
Assessment of personality pathology in adolescents
Chairpersons: Jan Henk Kamphuis, Amsterdam,
The Netherlands
Dineke Feenstra, Halsteren,
The Netherlands
oo1
Diagnosis and contracting in adolescent identity treatment
(AIT)
Anna Odom, New York, USA
oo2
Clinical illustrations of techniques in adolescent identity
treatment (AIT)
Pamela Foelsch, Harrison, USA
oo3
Demystifying risk management for high harm personality
disorder
Phil Minoudis, London, United Kingdom
Jake Shaw
W-03Workshop
17:15 – 18:45Room Orsini
EMDR treatment of trauma and PTSD in borderline
personality disorder organization: Clinical considerations
and assessment for the management of self-regulation,
relational difficulties, attachment-related behaviors and
metacognition
Chairperson: Dolores Mosquera, La Coruna, Spain
oo1
EMDR treatment in BPD organization: Assessment and
evaluation of metacognitive core features for intervention
support
Roberto Pedone, Caserta, Italy
oo2
EMDR treatment in BPD organization: Attachment-related
behaviors and metacognition
Antonio Onofri, Rome, Italy
oo1
Semi-structured interview for personality functioning
dsm-5 (stip-5) in adolescents: Clinical utility and
preliminary results in a sample 12-18 year old adolescents
Joost Hutsebaut, Halsteren, The Netherlands
Dineke Feenstra, Hilde de Saeger, Jan Henk Kamphuis
oo2
Why we should diagnose PD in adolescents: A case
illustration
Dineke Feenstra, Halsteren, The Netherlands
Joost Hutsebaut
oo3
Finding the missing piece: Therapeutic assessment with
personality disordered adolescents
Hilde de Saeger, Halsteren, The Netherlands
Dineke Feenstra, Joost Hutsebaut, Jan Henk Kamphuis
oo4
Multiple informants in the assessment of personality
pathology: Degree of correspondence and its clinical
relevance
Noor Tromp, Alkmaar, The Netherlands
Rob van Dijk
W-05Workshop
17:15 – 18:45Room Ludovisi
Understanding and supporting families with a relative
with borderline personality disorder
Chairpersons: Perry Hoffman, Rye, USA
Maria Elena Ridolfi, Belmont, USA
oo1
The role of families in the treatment of suicidal teens and
adults with borderline personality and related disorders
Alan Fruzzetti, Reno, USA
Luciana Guardiano Payne
oo2
Why involving families?
Erwin van Meekeren, The Hague, The Netherlands
Maria Elena Ridolfi, USA
15
scientific programme
Thursday, 16 October 2014
W-08Workshop
17:15 – 18:45Room Bentivoglio
Pathological narcissism: Therapeutic crossroards
Chairpersons: Clara Mucci, Pescara, Italy
Andrea Fossati, Milan, Italy
oo1
Variants of disorganized / insecure attachment in borderline
patients with and without co-morbid narcissistic perso­
nality disorders: Research findings and case examples
Diana Diamond, New York, USA
oo2
How the multidimensional assessment has clinical
implications in the treatment of pathological narcissism
Serena Borroni, Milan, Italy
Scalabrini Andrea
oo3
How the multidimensional assessment has clinical
implications in the treatment of pathological narcissism
Andrea Scalabrini, Milan, Italy
oo4
Working in psychoanalytic psychotherapy with difficult
patients: From borderline to narcissistic to antisocial
Clara Mucci, Pescara, Italy
W-09Workshop
oo4
Specific TARA method components for improving BPD
functioning and outcomes through family and consumer
psychoeducation
Regina Piscitelli, New York, USA
oo5
Collaborating for change: Specific components of the TARA
method that contribute to its´effectiveness in improving
family relationships
Valerie Porr, New York, USA
W-01-1Workshop
18:00 – 18:45Room Tivoli
Treating borderline personality disorder characteristics
in forensic settings
Chairpersons: Andre Ivanoff, Seattle, USA
Alex Chapman, Vancouver, Canada
oo1
The DBT approach to treating suicidal behaviors
Anthony Dubose, Seattle, USA
Andre Ivanoff
oo2
Treating borderline personality disorder characteristics
in forensic settings
Andre Ivanoff, Seattle, USA
Alex Chapman
17:15 – 18:45Room Raffaello
Collaborating for change: How TARA method family and
consumer psychoeducation improves BPD functioning
and family outcomes.
Chairpersons: Valerie Porr, New York, USA
Regina Piscitelli, New York, USA
oo1
BPD impact on siblings, partners, and children of people
with BPD – adaptations of the TARA method for specific
relationships
Sarah Piscitelli, New York, USA
oo2
A BPD individuals perspective: Finally, I get met impact
of TARA method psycho education on my relationships,
who I am, and on my treatment
Maria Scazzero, New York, USA
oo3
Real life consequences of shame, secrets, and misunder­
standing in self-perception
Allison Ferdinando, New York, USA
16
W-02-1Workshop
18:00 – 18:45Room Sforza
Demystifying risk management for high harm personality
disorder
Chairpersons: Phil Minoudis, London, United Kingdom
and Speakers:Jake Shaw, London, United Kingdom
OP-01Oral Presentations
09:00 – 10:00Room Colonna Doria
Psychobiology of BPD
Chairperson: Thomas Rinne, Utrecht, The Netherlands
scientific programme
Friday, 17 October 2014
oo1
Social exclusion leads to a reduction of oxytocin plasma
levels in borderline patients and patients with chronic
depression compared to healthy subjects
Andrea Jobst, Munich, Germany
Lena Sabass, Babette Renneberg, Anna Albert, Peter Zill,
Anna Buchheim, Frank Padberg
oo2
Effects of serotonin depletion on punishment processing
in the orbito frontal and anterior cingulate cortices in
healthy women
Katrin Helmbold, Aachen, Germany
Mikhail Zvyagintsev, Brigitte Dahmen, Sarah BubenzerBusch, Tilman J. Gaber, Molly Crockett, Martin Klasen,
Cristina Lucia Sanchez, Albrecht Eisert, Kerstin Konrad,
Ute Habel, Beate Herpertz-Dahlmann, Florian Zepf
oo3
A double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of quetiapine xr
in borderline personality disorder
S. Charles Schulz, Minneapolis, USA
Donald Black, Mary Zanarini, Ann Romine, Martha Shaw,
Jeff Allen
S-19Symposium
09:00 – 10:30Room Tivoli
Mentalization-based treatment in forensic settings
Chairpersons: Jessica Yakeley, London, United Kingdom
Gwen Adshead, London, United Kingdom
oo1
Treating the untreatable? Mentalization-based treatment
for antisocial personality disorder in the community
Jessica Yakeley, London, United Kingdom
oo2
Mentalization-based treatment for the highly disorganised
mind
Gwen Adshead, London, United Kingdom
Claire Wilson
oo3
MBT for men with complex co-morbid psychopathology
Martin Humphrey, London, United Kingdom
Claire Wilson
S-20Symposium
S-18Symposium
09:00 – 10:30Auditorium Medici / Visconti
Borderline personality disorder, substance abuse and
mentalization-based treatment (MBT)
Chairpersons: Sigmund Karterud, Oslo, Norway
Nina Arefjord, Bergen, Norway
oo1
BPD, SUD and MBT. An introduction
Sigmund Karterud, Oslo, Norway
oo2
A mentalization-based treatment (MBT) pilot trial for
female borderline patients with addiction
Nina Arefjord, Bergen, Norway
oo3
Stimulating mentalization as a change mechanism in
psychotherapy for borderline personality disorder and
substance use disorders
Björn Philips, Stockholm, Sweden
Clara Möller, Fredrik Falkenström, Linda Karlgren, Anton
Sandell
oo4
Mentalizing the transference in the treatment of perso­n­ality disorders and addiction
Katharina Teresa Morken, Bergen, Norway
09:00 – 10:30Room Estensi
Refining treatments for borderline personality disorder
in young people – Part 2
Chairpersons: Andrew Chanen, Melbourne, Australia
Louise McCutcheon, Melbourne, Australia
oo1
Changes in personality functioning in adolescents during
treatment
Joost Hutsebaut, Halsteren, The Netherlands
Dineke Feenstra
oo2
Is detection and treatment of adolescent self-harm a
suitable strategy for the treatment of borderline person­
ality disorder?
Michael Kaess, Heidelberg, Germany
Gloria Fischer, Peter Parzer, Franz Resch, Romuald
Brunner
oo3
What elements are necessary for effective treatment of
borderline personality disorder in youth?
Louise McCutcheon, Melbourne, Australia
Andrew Chanen
17
scientific programme
Friday, 17 October 2014
S-21Symposium
S-23Symposium
09:00 – 10:30Room Sforza
09:00 – 10:30Room Ludovisi
Cultural influence on personality functionning and
disorders
Chairpersons: Elsa Ronningstam, Belmont, USA
Konstantinos Taliouridis, Lausanne,
Switzerland
Alterations in endocrine systems in borderline personality
disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder and related
new treatment strategies
Chairpersons: Stefan Roepke, Berlin, Germany
Katja Wingenfeld, Berlin, Germany
oo1
Personality and personality disorders: The influence of
greek culture
Konstantinos Taliouridis, Lausanne, Switzerland
oo1
Endocrine alterations in borderline personality disorder:
Role of early life stress and daily hassles
Katja Bertsch, Heidelberg, Germany
Juliane Rausch, Krisztina Nagy, Andrea Gaebel, Dorothee
Gescher, Sabine Herpertz
oo2
Comparative note on personality disorders in three Swiss
subcultures – the French, Italian and German speaking
Eric Chalet, Lausanne, Switzerland
oo3
Changes in cultural contexts: The influence of moves and
migrations on personality functioning and disorders
Elsa Ronningstam, Belmont, USA
oo4
Culture and the diagnosis of personality disorders in
Denmark
Erik Simonsen, Roskilde, Denmark
S-22Symposium
09:00 – 10:30Room Orsini
Effectiveness of mentalisation-based treatment in clinical
adolescents: Preliminary results and future developments
Chairperson: Rob van Dijk, Alkmaar, The Netherlands
oo1
Statistical results and analysis
Jonathan Leipoldt, Alkmaar, The Netherlands
oo2
The second phase in the study and other future develop­
ments
Noor Tromp, Alkmaar, The Netherlands
oo3
Mentalisation-based treatment in clinical adolescents:
Practical implications
Rob van Dijk, Alkmaar, The Netherlands
18
oo2
Effects of hydrocortisone and fludrocortisone on cognition
in patients with BPD
Katja Wingenfeld, Berlin, Germany
Christian Otte, Oliver T. Wolf, Martin Driessen, Stefan
Roepke
oo3
Enhanced emotional empathy after mineral corticoid
receptor stimulation in women with borderline personality
disorder and healthy women
Stefan Roepke, Berlin, Germany
Katja Wingenfeld, Linn Kuehl, Katrin Janke, Kim
Hinkelmann, Isabel Dziobek, Juliane Fleischer
oo4
Is hydrocortisone an effective pharmacological treatment
of intrusive memories in PTSD? – A randomized, placebocontrolled, crossover study
Petra Ludaescher, Mannheim, Germany
S-24Symposium
09:00 – 10:30Room Bentivoglio
Mentalizing and treatment of borderline personality
disorder: Time for integration
Chairpersons: Anthony Bateman, London, United Kingdom
Robin Kissell, Los Angeles, USA
oo1
A single mechanism of change in borderline personality
disorder?
Peter Fonagy, London, United Kingdom
scientific programme
Friday, 17 October 2014
oo2
Empirical evidence for overlap of MBT and other therapies
for personality disorder
Carla Sharp, Houston, USA
oo3
BPD in the age of evidence-based treatments (EBT): From
modality-tethered clinicians to patient-targeted clinical
integration
Lois Choi-Kain, Boston, USA
oo4
Training naive practitioners whilst retaining good out­comes
Robin Kissell, Los Angeles, USA
oo5
Therapeutic integration around a mentalizing focus
Elizabeth Newlin, Houston, USA
S-25Symposium
09:00 – 10:30Room Raffaello
Steps: Different countries, different settings, part 1
Chairpersons: Donald Black, Iowa City, USA
Nancee Blum, Iowa City, USA
oo1
Implementing steps in forensic settings
Nancee Blum, Iowa City, USA
oo2
Introducing steps in a residential therapeutic community
Aldo Lombardo, Rome, Italy
oo3
Implementing steps in different service settings in the UK
Renee Harvey, Burgess Hill, United Kingdom
oo4
Organisational strategy to ensure effective implementation
of personality disorder service innovations
Kay Macdonald, Hove, United Kingdom
S-26Symposium
09:00 – 10:30Room Tiziano
Research agenda of the collaborative research unit for
borderline personality disorder II
Chairpersons: Christian Schmahl, Mannheim, Germany
Martin Bohus, Mannheim, Germany
oo1
Characteristics and training of neural responding in BPD
Christian Paret, Mannheim, Germany
Rosemarie Kluetsch
oo2
Tissue damage and pain – modeling cutting behavior in
BPD
Ulf Baumgaertner, Mannheim, Germany
Sarah Kuniss, Franziska Willis, Rolf-Detlef Treede,
Christian Schmahl
oo3
IP4 – sensory-affective interaction and body perception in
patients with borderline personality disorder
Robin Bekrater-Bodmann, Mannheim, Germany
Boo Young Chung, Herta Flor
oo4
Different components of impulsivity in relation to emotional
stress in patients with borderline personality disorder and
patients with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
Annegret Krause-Utz, Mannheim, Germany
Sylvia Cackowski, Julia van Eijk, Anne-Christine Reitz,
Traute Demirakca, Esther Sobanski, Martin Bohus,
Christian Schmahl, Gabriele Ende
S-27Symposium
09:00 – 10:30Room Leonardo
Transference-focused psychotherapy for narcissistic
personality disorder
Chairpersons: Frank Yeoman, New York, USA
Otto Kernberg, New York, USA
oo1
Transference-focused psychotherapy for narcissistic
personality disorder
Eve Caligor, New York, USA
oo2
TFP technique for patients with narcissistic personality
disorder (NPD)
Diana Diamond, New York, USA
19
scientific programme
Friday, 17 October 2014
S-28Symposium
09:00 – 10:30Room Mantegna
Mindreading impairments in patients with BPD: One, no
one or one hundred thousand?
Chairpersons: Antonio Semerari, Rome, Italy
Antonino Carcione, Rome, Italy
oo1
Are BPD patients better mind readers? New data
Patrick Luyten, Leuven, Belgium
oo2
Do patients with BPD have a specific profile of mindreading impairments compared to other personality
disorders?
Antonio Semerari, Rome, Italy
Livia Colle, Antonino Carcione, Donatella Fiore, Giuseppe
Nicolò, giovanni Pellecchia, Roberto Pedone
oo3
Thinking about assessment: Attachment, BPD, and the
MASC Task
Andrea Fossati, Rome, Italy
oo4
Mentalization and theory of mind in borderline personality
organization: Exploring the differences between affective
and cognitive aspects of social cognition in emotional
pathology
Monika Marszal, Poznañ, Poland
Dominika Gorska
oo5
First findings from a computational psychiatry approch
to borderline personality disorder
Tobias Nolte, London, United Kingdom
Peter Fonagy, Christoph Mathys, Andreas Hula, Read
Montague
oo2
The externalizing spectrum of personality and psycho­
pathology: Assessment and connections with dsm-defined
personality disorders
Robert Krueger, Minneapolis, USA
Mark Kramer, Kristian Markon, Christopher Patrick
oo3
Understanding impulsivity: Links to personality and
neurobiology
Colin DeYoung, Minneapolis, USA
oo4
Developmental patterns of the externalizing spectrum
in childhood confer risk for antisocial and borderline
personality disorder
Stephanie Stepp, Pittsburgh, USA
10:30 – 11:00 Break
KL-01
Keynote Lecture
11:00 – 12:30Auditorium Medici / Visconti
What I have changed my mind about
Chairperson: Anthony Bateman, London, United Kingdom
Lecturer:
Marsha Linehan, Seattle, USA
12:30 – 13:30 Break
PL-03
Plenary Session
13:30 – 14:15Auditorium Medici / Visconti
The neurobiology of interpersonal reactivity in borderline
personality disorder
Chairperson: Christian Schmahl, Mannheim, Germany
Speaker:
Antonia New, New York, USA
S-29Symposium
09:00 – 10:30Room Borghese
New directions in borderline and antisocial personalities
and their connections with the externalizing spectrum
Chairpersons: Robert Krueger, Minneapolis, USA
Stephanie Stepp, Pittsburgh, USA
oo1
Affect, impulsivity, and impulsive behaviors in borderline
personality disorder in daily life
Timothy Trull, Columbia, USA
20
KL-01 / PL-03: Simultaneous translation in Italian language provided.
scientific programme
Friday, 17 October 2014
PL-04
Plenary Session
14:15 – 15:00Auditorium Medici / Visconti
A new take on the treatment of borderline personality
disorder: Are we witnessing the end or merely the
beginning of the great psychotherapy debate?
Chairperson: Anthony Bateman, London, United Kingdom
Speaker:
Patrick Luyten, Leuven, Belgium
15:00 – 15:15 Break
OP-02Oral Presentation
15:15 – 16:15Room Colonna Doria
PTSD and BPD: Clinical and research implications
Chairperson: Nikolaus Kleindienst, Mannheim,
Germany
oo1
Borderline personality disorder and trauma in homosexual
male sex workers in Russia
Alla Kholmogorova, Moscow, Russia
Arseniy Maximov
oo2
Ambulatory assessment reveals very high numbers of
intrusions and flashbacks in PTSD related to childhood
sexual abuse
Nikolaus Kleindienst, Mannheim, Germany
Kathlen Priebe, Josepha Zimmer, Martin Bohus
oo3
Psychotic symptoms in borderline personality disorder:
Prevalence and associations with comorbidity and
traumatization
Katrin Schroeder, Hamburg, Germany
Christian G. Huber, Ingo Schafer
S-30Symposium
15:15 – 16:45Auditorium Medici / Visconti
New developments in MBT
Chairpersons: Annelies Laurenssen, Halsteren,
The Netherlands
Patrick Luyten, Leuven, Belgium
oo2
Implementation of a quality assurance system for men­
talization-based treatment: An illustration and report of
2 years of experiences
Dawn Bales, Halsteren, The Netherlands
Joost Hutsebaut
oo3
Day hospital mentalization-based treatment versus
treatment as usual in the treatment of severe borderline
personality disorder: First results of a randomized
controlled trial
Annelies Laurenssen, Halsteren, The Netherlands
oo4
A rationale for using quality assurance systems in psy­
chotherapy for BPD patients: A multiple case study
Joost Hutsebaut, Halsteren, The Netherlands
Dawn Bales
S-31Symposium
15:15 – 16:45Room Tivoli
Understanding the processes of change in DBT
Chairpersons: Alan Fruzzetti, Reno, USA
Shelley McMain, Toronto, Canada
oo1
Predictors of treatment response in two treatments for
borderline personality disorder
Shelley McMain, Toronto, Canada
Shian-Ling Keng, Ryan Barnhart
oo2
Anger processing and outcome in dialectical behavior
group therapy for borderline personality disorder:
A process analysis within a randomized controlled trial
Ueli Kramer, Lausanne, Switzerland
oo3
Emotion regulation and family functioning as mediators of
outcome across psychodynamic and dialectical behavior
therapies
Luciana Payne, Reno, USA
Alan Fruzzetti
oo4
Comparing psychodynamic and DBT therapists on insession validation of the patient and treatment outcomes
Alan Fruzzetti, Reno, USA
oo1
Mentalizing and borderline personality disorder – does
severity predict outcome?
Anthony Bateman, London, United Kingdom
PL-04: Simultaneous translation in Italian language provided.
21
scientific programme
Friday, 17 October 2014
S-32Symposium
15:15 – 16:45Room Estensi
Personality disorders of adolescents in different settings
Chairpersons: Klaus Schmeck, Basel, Switzerland
Andrew Chanen, Melbourne, Australia
oo1
Responding to the needs of youth with personality disorder
in Australian mental health services
Andrew Chanen, Melbourne, Australia
oo2
Personality disorders of adolescents in Swiss youth welfare
institutions
Klaus Schmeck, Basel, Switzerland
oo3
Personality disorders in substance abusing adolescents
in Chile
Andres Borzutzky, Santiago, Chile
oo4
Personality disorders of adolescents in a mexican forensic
setting
Moises Kassin, Mexico City, Mexico
S-33Symposium
15:15 – 16:45Room Sforza
The emergence of BPD in adolescence: State of the art
Chairpersons: Patrick Luyten, Leuven, Belgium
Peter Fonagy, London, United Kingdom
oo1
Contributions of neuroimaging findings to understanding
the emergence of BPD
Martin Debbané, Geneva, Switzerland
oo2
BPD in adolescence: The state-of-the-science
Carla Sharp, Houston, USA
oo3
Trajectories of adolescent risk-taking and self-harm
behavior as prospective predictors of later borderline
personality pathology
Michael Kaess, Heidelberg, Germany
Orit Nakar, Gloria Fischer, Peter Parzer, Franz Resch,
Romuald Brunner
22
oo4
The relationship between dimensions of aggression and
pathological narcissism in adolescents
Marc Allroggen, Ulm, Germany
Peter Rehmann, Michael Kölch
S-34Symposium
15:15 – 16:45Room Orsini
Diagnosing adaptive and maladaptive personality
functioning: Assessing developmental pathways by
psychodynamic interviewing and self-questionnaire
Chairpersons: Theo Ingenhoven, Lunteren,
The Netherlands
Henricus van Rien, Amsterdam
The Netherlands
oo1
Assessment of the developmental profile by a self-ques­
tionnaire: Norming and subgroup analyses
Theo Ingenhoven, Lunteren, The Netherlands
oo2
Assessment of the developmental profile by self-report:
Reliability, internal consistency and construct validity
Marike Polak, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
oo3
Measuring the balance between healthy and pathological
personality features from a psychodynamic perspective
Henricus van Rien, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
S-35Symposium
15:15 – 16:45Room Ludovisi
Diagnosis of personality functioning: From interview to
questionnaire
Chairpersons: Stephan Doering, Vienna, Austria
John Clarkin, White Plains, USA
oo1
The Operationalized Psychodynamic Diagnosis Structure
Questionnaire (OPD-SQ)
Johannes C. Ehrenthal, Heidelberg, Germany
Ulrike Dinger, Lena Horsch, Henning Schauenburg
scientific programme
Friday, 17 October 2014
oo2
The inventory of personality organization (IPO)
Susanne Hoerz-Sagstetter, Berlin, Germany
Johannes Zimmermann, Cord Benecke, Gerhard
Dammann
oo3
Diagnostic interviews: The structured interview of
personality organization (STIPO) and the operational zed
psychodynamic diagnosis (OPD-2)
Stephan Doering, Vienna, Austria
oo4
Operationalizing undifferentiated affect: Theoretical and
estimation advantages of a generalizability theory approach
Sean Lane, Columbia, USA
Timothy Trull
S-36Symposium
15:15 – 16:45Room Bentivoglio
The role of adult attachment interview and reflective
function in the understanding of the clinical features of
personality pathology
Chairpersons: Mario Speranza, Le Chesnay, France
Peter Fonagy, London, United Kingdom
oo1
The role of reflective functioning in personality disorder:
A two-year follow-up study
Marco Chiesa, Richmond, United Kingdom
Peter Fonagy
oo2
Categorical and dimensional approaches in evaluating the
relationship between attachment and severe personality
disorders: An empirical study in a sample of adolescents
and adults
Riccardo Williams, Rome, Italy
Mauro Ferrara, Valentina Nassisi, Fiorella Fantini, Marco
Chiesa
oo4
Lower plasma oxytocin levels in borderline patients with
disorganized / unresolved attachment representations
Anna Buchheim, Innsbruck, Austria
Andrea Jobst, Maria-Christine Mauer, Tanja Daltrozzo,
Christine Bauriedl-Schmidt, Lena Sabass, Nina Sarubin,
Peter Falkai, Babette Renneberg, Peter Zill, Frank
Padberg
S-37Symposium
15:15 – 16:45Room Raffaello
Steps: Different countries, different settings, part 2
Chairpersons: Donald Black, Iowa City, USA
Nancee Blum, Iowa City, USA
oo1
Steps treatment of inpatients with mood disorders and
co-occurring borderline personality disorder
Andrea Fossati, Rome, Italy
oo2
Steps (VERS) in the Netherlands
Bas van Wel, Deventer, The Netherlands
oo3
Starting steps in a private practice setting
Konstantinos Taliouridis, Lausanne, Switzerland
oo4
Alternatives to self harm – a skills based approach within
a university healthcare setting
Diane Clare, Auckland, New Zealand
oo5
Systems training for emotional predictability and problem
solving (STEPS): Programme efficacy and personality
features as predictors of drop-out
Andrea Fossati, Rome, Italy
oo3
Violence within mother-infant relationships: Attachment
processes and personality traits in a sample of infanticide
mothers
Nicoletta Giacchetti, Rome, Italy
Franca Aceti
23
scientific programme
Friday, 17 October 2014
S-38Symposium
15:15 – 16:45Room Tiziano
Research agenda of the collaborative research unit for
borderline personality disorder I
Chairpersons: Martin Bohus, Mannheim, Germany
Sabine Herpertz, Heidelberg, Germany
oo1
Towards a second-person social neuroscience of BPD: The
application of fMRI hyperscanning
Peter Kirsch, Mannheim, Germany
Edda Bilek, Matthias Ruf, Gabriela Stößel, Andreas
Meyer-Lindenberg
oo2
Alterations of interpersonal functioning in BPD: Effects
of social exclusion and inclusion on interaction behavior
Stefanie Lis, Mannheim, Germany
Melanie Domsalla, Lisa Liebke, Georgia Koppe, Janine
Thome, Martin Bohus
oo2
Training of emotion regulation by amygdala neurofeedback
in borderline patients
Christian Paret, Mannheim, Germany
oo4
Direct modulation of resting-state network connectivity
following EEG neurofeedback in PTSD
Rosemarie Kluetsch, Mannheim, Germany
Tomas Ros, Paul Frewen, Christian Schmahl, Ruth Lanius
S-40Symposium
15:15 – 16:45Room Mantegna
Different components of impulsivity in borderline perso­
nality disorder
Chairpersons: Oliver Tüscher, Mainz, Germany
Annegret Krause-Utz, Mannheim, Germany
oo3
Persistent consequences of peer group rejection in rats
– an animal model with relevance for BPD
Miriam Schneider, Mannheim, Germany
oo1
Emotionally modulated and neutral response inhibition
in borderline personality disorder
Alexandra Sebastian, Mainz, Germany
Oliver Tüscher, Gitta Jacob, Klaus Lieb
S-39Symposium
oo2
Effect of stress or cortisol administration on response
inhibition in borderline personality disorder
Katja Wingenfeld, Berlin, Germany
Christian Otte, Oliver T. Wolf, Martin Driessen
15:15 – 16:45Room Leonardo
The use of neurofeedback as a potential treatment for
disorders of emotion regulation
Chairpersons: Rosemarie Kluetsch, Mannheim, Germany
Christian Paret, Mannheim, Germany
oo1
Real-time fMRI neurofeedback for training of amygdala
regulation
Annette Bruehl, Zurich, Switzerland
Sigrid Scherpiet, Steffi Weidt, Philipp Staempfli, James
Sulzer, Erich Seifritz, Uwe Herwig
24
oo4
Impulsivity in relation to stress in borderline personality
disorder and adult attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
Annegret Krause-Utz, Mannheim, Germany
Sylvia Cack, Julia van Eijk, Martin Bohus, Gabriele Ende,
Christian Schmahl
scientific programme
Friday, 17 October 2014
S-41Symposium
15:15 – 16:45Room Borghese
Longitudinal course
Chairperson: Mary Zanarini, Cambridge, USA
oo1
Prediction of time-to-attainment of recovery for borderline
patients followed prospectively for 16 years: Nosologic
and treatment implications
Mary Zanarini, Cambridge, Boston, USA
oo2
The role of borderline traits in the prospective course of
other personality disorders over seven years
Svenn Torgersen, Oslo, Norway
oo3
Identifying latent trajectories of borderline personality
disorder symptoms from adolescence through young
adulthood: Childhood factors influencing class membership
Stephanie Stepp, Pittsburgh, USA
oo4
Differential long-term course related to early and retarded
diagnosis of borderline personality disorder
Irene Alvarez-Tomás, Barcelona, Spain
16:45 – 17:00 Break
OP-03Oral Presentation
17:00 – 18:30Room Colonna Doria
The interpersonal context of BPD
Chairperson: Lars Mehlum, Oslo, Norway
oo1
The interpersonal context of borderline personality
disorder: Working with families and carers to reduce
burden and improve the interactional environment
Brin Grenyer, Wollongong, Australia
Rachel Bailey
oo2
Being a close relative of someone suffering from borderline
personality disorder
Virginie Salamin, Marsens, Switzerland
Olivier Clement, Florence Guenot, Sabine Corzani, Marco
Merlo
oo3
Evaluating continued effectiveness of the family con­
nections programme in an Irish population
Daniel Flynn, Cork, Ireland
Mary Kells, Mary Joyce, Catalina Suarez
oo4
Childhood malevolence reported by borderline patients
and personality-disordered camparsison subject: Des­
cription and prediction
Maria Elena Ridolfi, USA
OP-04Oral Presentation
17:00 – 18:00Room Mantegna
Treating BPD: Challenges and controversial issues
Chairperson: Stephan Doering, Vienna, Austria
oo1
Therapeutic alliance and borderline personality disorder
Laura Lopez, Barcelona, Spain
Alessandra M.A Nivoli, Mireia Tardon, Ares Marin,
Barbara Patrizi, Xero Gasol, Miquel Gasol
oo2
Changing from a traditional psychodynamic treatment
programme to mentalization-based treatment for patients
with borderline personality disorder: Does it make a
difference?
Elfrida Hartveit Kvarstein, Oslo, Norway
Sigmund Karterud, Geir Pedersen, Øyvind Urnes,
Benjamin Hummelen, Theresa Wilberg
oo3
Change in reflective function: Results from a randomized
control trial of transference-focused psychotherapy for
borderline personality disorder
Melitta Fischer-Kern, Vienna, Austria
Strephan Doering, Svenja Taubner, Susanne HoerzSagstetter, Michael Rentrop, Peter Schuster, Peter
Buchheim, Anna Buchheim
S-42Symposium
17:00 – 18:30Auditorium Medici / Visconti
Evidence-based psychotherapies for borderline personality
disorder
Chairpersons: John Oldham, Houston, USA
Antonia New, New York, USA
oo1
Evidence-based psychotherapies for borderline personality
disorder: Mentalization-based treatment
Peter Fonagy, London, United Kingdom
25
scientific programme
Friday, 17 October 2014
oo2
Current data and ongoing research in dialectical behavior
therapy
Martin Bohus, Mannheim, Germany
oo3
Evidence-based psychotherapies for borderline personality
disorder
John Oldham, Houston, USA
oo4
BPD in the age of evidence-based treatments (EBT):
Implementation & integration
Lois Choi-Kain, Boston, USA
S-43Symposium
17:00 – 18:30Room Tivoli
Neurofunctional correlates of psychotherapy effects –
understanding the mechanisms of change
Chairpersons: Christian Schmahl, Mannheim, Germany
Sabine Herpertz, Heidelberg, Germany
oo1
Insula and anterior cingulate activity improves with
treatment in child abuse related PTSD, a RCT
Kathleen Thomaes, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Ethy Dorrepaal, Nel Draijer, Michiel B de Ruiter, Bernet M.
Elzinga, Anton J. van Balkom, Jan H Smit, Dick J. Veltman
oo2
Change in amygdala activation with dialectical behavioral
therapy in borderline personality disorder
Marianne Goodman, New York, USA
oo3
Identifying mediators and predictors of change in
borderline personality disorder
Sabine Herpertz, Heidelberg, Germany
oo4
Effects of dialectical behavior therapy on pain-mediated
affect regulation in borderline personality disorder
Christian Schmahl, Mannheim, Germany
Inga Niedtfeld, Dorina Winter, Ruth Schmitt, Martin
Bohus, Sabine Herpertz
26
S-44Symposium
17:00 – 18:30Room Estensi
Neurobiology of adolescent self-harm and borderline
personality disorder
Chairpersons: Michael Kaess, Heidelberg, Germany
Romuald Brunner, Heidelberg, Germany
oo1
Neural correlates of social and physical pain in adolescents
with non-suicidal self-injury
Rebecca Groschwitz, Ulm, Germany
Birgit Abler, Georg Groen, Martina Bonenberger, Paul
Plener
oo2
Basal hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activity in youth
with first-presentation borderline personality disorder
Michael Kaess, Heidelberg, Germany
Jen Betts, Sharnel Perera, Andrew Chanen
oo3
Structural brain imaging in adolescent borderline perso­
nality disorder
Romuald Brunner, Heidelberg, Germany
Klaus Maier-Hein, Henze Romy, Julia Richter, Peter
Parzer, Franz Resch, Bram Stieltjes
oo4
The association between emotional neglect and hippo­
campal volume in prediction of borderline personality
disorder symptoms in early adolescence
Andrew Chanen, Melbourne, Australia
Sarah Whittle, Murat Yucel, Kaess Michael, Julian
Simmons, Nicholas Allen, Jovev Martina
S-45Symposium
17:00 – 18:30Room Sforza
Dialectical behavior therapy for posttraumatic stress
disorder after childhood abuse (DBT-PTSD)
Chairpersons: Kathlen Priebe, Potsdam, Germany
Nikolaus Kleindienst, Mannheim, Germany
oo1
Exposure-based therapy in multiple traumatized patients
with posttraumatic stress disorder related to childhood
sexual abuse
Kathlen Priebe, Potsdam, Germany
Nikolaus Kleindienst, Antje Krüger, Anne Dyer, Regina
Steil, Martin Bohus
scientific programme
Friday, 17 October 2014
oo2
Treating psychosocial and neural consequences of
childhood interpersonal violence in adults (Release):
A randomized controlled trial
Sophie Rausch, Mannheim, Germany
Regina Steil, Thomas Fydrich, Kathlen Priebe, Petra
Ludäscher, Meike Müller-Engelmann, Martin Bohus
oo3
Skills-assisted exposure in patients with posttraumatic
stress disorder after childhood abuse
Nora Goerg, Mannheim, Germany
Priebe Kathlen, Friederike Schriner, Martin Bohus
oo4
Dissociation and treatment success in posttraumatic stress
disorder related to childhood sexual abuse
Nikolaus Kleindienst, Mannheim, Germany
Martin Bohus
S-46Symposium
17:00 – 18:30Room Orsini
Borderline personality disorder and attention-deficit /
hyperactivity disorder: Developmental and clinical issue
Chairpersons: Alexandra Philipsen, Freiburg, Germany
Andrea Fossati, Rome, Italy
oo1
Efficacy of a structured skills training programme on
emotion regulation and impulse control in adult ADHD –
results of a randomised controlled trial (COMPAS)
Alexandra Philipsen, Freiburg, Germany
Erika Graf, Swantje Matthies, Michael Colla, Esther
Sobanski, Christian Jacob, Michael Rösler, Bernhard Kis,
Michael Huss, Matthias Berger
oo2
Neutral and emotionally modulated response inhibition
in BPD and ADHD
Alexandra Sebastian, Mainz, Germany
Gitta Jacob, Klaus Lieb, Oliver Tüscher
oo3
Impact of comorbid developmental disorders on social
cognition in female patients with borderline personality
disorder
Swantje Matthies, Freiburg, Germany
Anne Brodführer, Markus Heinrichs, Nicole Ower,
Alexandra Philipsen
oo4
The relationship between childhood history of ADHD
symptoms and DSM-IV borderline personality disorder
features among personality disordered outpatients
Andrea Fossati, Rome, Italy
oo5
Attention deficit / hyperactivity disorder and impulsivity
in borderline personality disorder and substance / alcohol
abuse disorder
Xero Gasol, Barcelona, Spain
Laura Lopez, Barbara Patrizi, Alessandra M. A. Nivoli,
Miquel Gasol
S-47Symposium
17:00 – 18:30Room Ludovisi
Contributions of empirical research on dialectical behavior
therapy (DBT) in Latin Europe
Chairperson: Cesare Maffei, Milan, Italy
oo1
Testing the mindfulness impulsivity hypothesis: Comparing
mindfulness versus interpersonal effectiveness modules
on laboratory measures
Joaquim Soler, Barcelona, Spain
oo2
DBT with BPD: An exploratory study of treatment outcomes
Donatella Fiore, Rome, Italy
Livia Colle, Alessandra Nachira, Giuseppe Nicolò,
Antonio Semerari, Roberto Pedone
oo3
A randomized controlled study of DBT in borderline
subjects treated in a day-hospital programme
Raffaele Visintini, Milan, Italy
Ilaria Carretta, Emanuela Roder, Giulia Fantoni, Ottavia
Passaquindici, Rossana Ramazzi, Nicolò Gaj
oo4
Efficacy of dialectical behaviour therapy in borderline
personality disorder: A 1-year follow-up study
Ares Marin, Barcelona, Spain
Alessandra M.A Nivoli, Laura Lopez, Barbara Patrizi,
Xero Gasol, Ana Cervantes, Miquel Gasol
27
scientific programme
Friday, 17 October 2014
S-48Symposium
17:00 – 18:30Room Bentivoglio
Disrupted metacognition and mentalizing in borderline
personality disorder: Associations with psychopathology
and therapy outcomes
Chairpersons: Giancarlo Dimaggio, Rome, Italy
Martin Brune, Bochum, Germany
oo1
Mentalization in borderline personality disorder: An
explorative study using a novel cartoon-based task
Martin Brune, Bochum, Germany
Sarah Walden, Marc-Andreas Edel, Giancarlo Dimaggio
oo2
Metacognitive processes, symptoms level and change in
borderline personality disorder: A pilot study
Pauline Maillard, Prangins, Switzerland
Ueli Kramer, Giancarlo Dimaggio
oo3
Emotional dysregulation and BPD and other PD traits:
Correlations with symptoms, interpersonal problems and
alexithymia
Giancarlo Dimaggio, Rome, Italy
Raffaele Popolo, Salvatore Giampaolo, Antonella
Montano, Luisa Buonocore, Antonella Imbimbo, Manuela
Pasinetti, Paolo Ottavi
oo4
Is reflective functioning associated with clinical symptoms
and long-term course in patients with borderline personality
disorder? – Results from a six year follow-up study
Theresa Wilberg, Oslo, Norway
Bjørnar Antonsen, Merete Johansen, Elfrida Kvarstein
S-49Symposium
17:00 – 18:30Room Raffaello
Modulating factors of emotion processing in borderline
personality disorder
Chairpersons: Stefanie Lis, Mannheim, Germany
Dorina Winter, Mannheim, Germany
oo1
Self-Reference alters the assessment of emotional valence
in borderline personality disorder
Dorina Winter, Mannheim, Germany
Cornelia Herbert, Katrin Koplin, Martin Bohus, Christian
Schmahl, Stefanie Lis
28
oo2
Associations of emotional intelligence with emotion
regulation abilities in borderline personality disorder
Nicole Schlosser, Bielefeld, Germany
Silvia Fernando, Martin Driessen, Thomas Beblo,
Carolin Steuwe
oo3
Effects of social exclusion on the perception of emotional
faces in borderline personality disorder
Janine Thome, Mannheim, Germany
Lisa Liebke, Melanie Domsalla, Stefanie Lis
oo4
Context dependent empathic accuracy in borderline
personality disorder
Annemarie Miano, Berlin, Germany
Isabel Dziobek, Stefan Roepke
S-50Symposium
17:00 – 18:30Room Tiziano
The shorter the better? A 10-session version of general
psychiatric management, motive-oriented therapeutic
relationship, therapeutic alliance and outcome
Chairpersons: Ueli Kramer, Lausanne, Switzerland
Paul Links, London, Canada
oo1
Effects of motive-oriented therapeutic relationship in a
ten-session general psychiatric treatment of borderline
personality disorder: A randomized controlled trial
Stéphane Kolly, Lausanne, Switzerland
oo2
Understanding early drop-out in a treatment based on
general clinical management
Patrick Charbon, Lausanne, Switzerland
oo3
Early therapeutic alliance, intervention quality and
outcome in a ten-session general psychiatric treatment
of borderline personality disorder
Céline Imesch, Lausanne, Switzerland
oo4
Results of a study of the efficacy of short-term inpatient
dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) for chronically
parasuicidal BPD (young) adults
Louisa van den Bosch, Oegstgeest, The Netherlands
Roland Sinnaeve
oo5
Discussion
Paul Links, London, Canada
scIentIfIc ProGraMMe
friday, 17 october 2014
s-51
17:00 – 18:30
symposium
room leonardo
s-52
17:00 – 18:30
symposium
room borghese
Dialectical behavior therapy (Dbt): Dissemination and
implementation update
Chairpersons: Anthony Dubose, Seattle, USA
Andre Ivanoff, Seattle, USA
borderline personality disorder – insights in its neuropharmacology and immunology
Chairpersons: Petra Ludaescher, Mannheim, Germany
Dagmar Koethe, Heidelberg, Germany
oo1
the scope of Dbt dissemination: Implications of implementation science
Anthony Dubose, Seattle, USA
oo1
neuropeptides and bDnf and emotion dysregulation in
borderline personality disorder
Mercedes Perez-Rodriguez, New York, USA
oo2
Dbt intensive training: updated us data to date
Andre Ivanoff, Seattle, USA
oo2
the role of opioids in the neurobiology of altered emotion
regulation in borderline personality disorder
Petra Ludaescher, Mannheim, Germany
oo3
Dbt in the uK: updated dissemination and implementation
data
Michaela Swales, Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom
oo4
experimental and innovative Dbt implementations
Marsha Linehan, Seattle, USA
oo3
neuro-immune interactions in borderline personality
disorder: relationships between Il-18 and sadness induced
brain regional endogenous opioid receptor activation
Alan Prossin, Ann Arbor, USA
oo4
endocannabinoids and neuropeptides in csf and serum
from borderline personality disorder patients
Dagmar Koethe, Heidelberg, Germany
4 th International congress on borderline
Personality Disorder and allied Disorders
8 – 10 september 2016
university of Vienna // Vienna, austria
SAVE
THE
DATE
European Society for the Study
of Personality Disorders
www.esspd.eu
www.borderline-congress.org
29
scientific programme
Saturday, 18 October 2014
OP-05Oral Presentation
09:00 – 10:30Room Bentivoglio
Implenting new strategies and services for PD diagnosis
and treatment
Chairperson: Serena Borroni, Milan, Italy
oo1
The economic burden of borderline personality disorder
in Catalonia (Spain)
Marc Ferrer, Barcelona, Spain
Natàlia Calvo, Mònica Prat, Óscar Andión, Enric
Aragonès, Murielle Bendeck, Miguel Casas, Luis
Salvador-Carulla
oo2
Challenges in the implementation of the DSM-5 borderline
personality disorder diagnostic criteria
Gracie Jackson, Chapel Hill, USA
Ashelee Yang
oo3
Stability of narcissistic personality disorder: Tracking
categorical and dimensional rating systems over a twoyear period
Aline Vater, Berlin, Germany
Kathrin Ritter, Sandra Strunz, Elsa F. Ronningstam,
Babette Renneberg, Stefan Roepke
oo4
Associations between DSM-5 Section III BPD traits and
schema therapy constructs
Erik Simonsen, Roskilde, Denmark
Bo Bach, Erik Lykke Mortensen
OP-06Oral Presentation
09:00 – 10:30Room Mantegna
Emotion regulation and mind / body interface in BPD
Chairperson: Christian Schmahl, Mannheim, Germany
oo1
Reading in the mind of the eyes test in major depression
and borderline personality disorder: A meta analysis
Mara Richman, Kalamazoo, USA
Zsolt Unoka
30
oo2
Evaluation of the own body in borderline personality
disorders
Nikolaus Kleindienst, Mannheim, Germany
Martin Bohus, Anne Dyer
oo3
Non-suicidal self-injury, emotional dysregulation and
sensation seeking in clinical, forensic and community adults
Griseila Cruz-Roman, Trujillo Alto, Puerto Rico
Maria Velez-Pastrana, Domingo Marques
oo4
Personality organization and quality of sexual life
Antonio Prunas, Milan, Italy
oo5
Compulsive buying behaviour and borderline personality
disorder
Aniko Maraz, Budapest, Hungary
Borbála Hende, Zsolt Demetrovics
S-53Symposium
09:00 – 10:30Auditorium Medici / Visconti
What‘s the difference that makes the difference? Commo­n­
alities and differences across efficacious treatments for BPD
Chairpersons: Valerie Porr, New York, USA
Anthony Bateman, London, United Kingdom
oo1
Demonstrating dialectic behavior therapy
Martin Bohus, Mannheim, Germany
oo2
Demonstrating transference focused therapy (TFP)
Frank Yeoman, New York, USA
oo3
Demonstrating the TARA method of family psycho
education
Valerie Porr, New York, USA
oo4
Demonstrating Mentalization Based Therapy (MBT)
Anthony Bateman, London, United Kingdom
scientific programme
Saturday, 18 October 2014
S-54Symposium
09:00 – 10:30Room Tivoli
Some of the successes of the dialectical behavior therapyDBT in Italy and the challenges that remain
Chairpersons: Lavinia Barone, Pavia, Italy
Cesare Maffei, Milan, Italy
oo1
The Italian DBT programmes: An overview and some
considerations
Lavinia Barone, Pavia, Italy
oo2
Up to 10 years of DBT in the public health service for drug
addiction: What are we leaving out?
Doriana Losasso, Milan, Italy
Rossana Spotti, Silvia Cabrini, Idelmina Crepaldi, Marina
Leoni, Lucia Murgo, Bruna Palonta, Patrizia Trevisani,
Angela Draisci, Gianmaria Zita, Edoardo Cozzolino
oo3
Successes and challenges of the application of standard
DBT in a hospital and in a private practice
Donatella Fiore, Rome, Italy
Nicolò Gaj
oo4
Inpatient dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) for borderline
personality disorder: Constrains and potentialities
Alessandro Rachini, Florence, Italy
Caterina Pieraccioli, Valentina Silvani, Angela Perone,
Chiara Conti, Valentina Vannuccini
S-55Symposium
09:00 – 10:30Room Estensi
Emotion dysregulation and dissociation in patients with
a history of interpersonal trauma
Chairpersons: Annegret Krause-Utz, Mannheim, Germany
Dorina Winter, Mannheim, Germany
oo2
Genetic modulation of neural and behavioral reactivity to
the environment in borderline personality disorder
Mercedes Perez-Rodriguez, New York, USA
oo3
Influence of emotional distraction on working memory in
borderline personality disorder – the role of dissociation
Annegret Krause-Utz, Mannheim, Germany
Dorina Winter, Martin Bohus, Christian Schmahl,
Bernet Elzinga, Nicole Oei, Friederike Schriner, Sylvia
Cackowski, Julia van Eijk, Gabriele Ende
oo4
Induced dissociation alters cognitive and emotional
disinhibition in borderline personality disorder
Dorina Winter, Mannheim, Germany
Stefanie Lis, Friederike Schriner, Martin Bohus, Christian
Schmahl
S-56Symposium
09:00 – 10:30Room Sforza
Developmental pathways to adolescent BPD
Chairpersons: Carla Sharp, Pittsburgh, USA
Andrew Chanen, Melbourne, Australia
oo1
Familial mechanisms of risk for borderline personality
disorder among suicidal adolescents
Sheila Crowell, Salt Lake City, USA
Erin Kaufman
oo2
Expanding the externalizing pathway to adolescent
BPD: Incorporating emotional sensitivity and exposure
to childhood adversity
Stephanie Stepp, Pittsburgh, USA
oo3
The phenomenology and validity of adolescent BPD
Andrea Fossati, Rome, Italy
oo1
Blunted and discordant affect: Dissociation, physiology
and complex trauma exposure
Wendy d’Andrea, New York, USA
Greg Siegle
31
scientific programme
Saturday, 18 October 2014
S-57Symposium
09:00 – 10:30Room Orsini
Borderline adolescents: From research data to clinical
issues
Chairpersons: Maurice Corcos, Paris, France
Veronique Delvenne, Brussels, Belgium
oo1
Main findings from EURNET-BPD
Alexandra Pham-Scottez, Paris, France
oo2
Emotional dysregulation in adolescents with borderline
personality disorder
Mario Speranza, Le Chesnay, France
oo3
Borderline‘s creativity: From formlessness to rythm
Vanessa de Matteis, Paris, France
oo4
Issues in psychotherapeutic treatments: A systematic
review
Lionel Cailhol, Montreal, Canada
Félix-Antoine Berube, Pierre David, Marie Désilets
S-58Symposium
09:00 – 10:30Room Ludovisi
Prefrontal functional abnormalities and therapeutic
alternatives in borderline personality disorder:
Neuroimaging studies and cognitive rehabilitation
intervention
Chairpersons: Juan C. Pascual, Barcelona, Spain
Joaquim Soler, Barcelona, Spain
oo1
Fronto-medial abnormalities in borderline personality
disorder: Converging resting-state functional magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) and diffusion studies
Ana Martín-Blanco, Barcelona, Spain
Salvatore Aguilar
oo2
Prefrontal cortex alterations in borderline personality
disorder with non-suicidal self-injury behaviors
Daniel Vega, Barcelona, Spain
Josep Marco
32
oo3
Cognitive rehabilitation versus psychoeducation in
borderline personality disorder: A controlled clinical trial
Jose L. Carrasco, Madrid, Spain
oo4
Affective interference with cognitive processing in
borderline personality disorder: An fMRI study
Paul Soloff, Pittsburgh, USA
Richard White, Vaibhav Diwadkar
S-59Symposium
09:00 – 10:30Room Tiziano
Experimental approaches to interpersonal functioning in
borderline personality disorder
Chairpersons: Stefanie Lis, Mannheim, Germany
Peter Kirsch, Mannheim, Germany
oo1
Social interaction in a virtual reality environment and
effects of subsequent social exclusion
Lisa Liebke, Mannheim, Germany
Melanie Domsalla, Koppe Georgia, Schmahl Christian,
Martin Bohus, Stefanie Lis
oo2
Cognitive and affective processing of social exclusion in
borderline personality disorder and social anxiety disorder
Lea Gutz, Berlin, Germany
Babette Renneberg, Stefan Roepke, Michael Niedeggen
oo3
Altruistic and strategic fairness after social exclusion in
borderline personality disorder – an fMRI study
Stefanie Lis, Mannheim, Germany
Melanie Domsalla, Lisa Liebke, Georgia Koppe, Janine
Thome, Christian Schmahl, Martin Bohus
oo4
Neural signatures of cooperation and trust in Borderline
Personality Disorder – First results from an fMRI hyper­
scanning study
Peter Kirsch, Mannheim, Germany
Gabriela Stößel, Edda Bilek, Martin Gerchen, Matthias
Ruf, Andreas Meyer-Lindenberg
scientific programme
Saturday, 18 October 2014
S-60Symposium
PL-05
Plenary Session
09:00 – 10:30Room Colonna Doria
14:00 – 14:45Auditorium Medici / Visconti
The Psychodynamic Diagnostic Manual – 2 (PDM-2)
Chairpersons: Massimo Ammaniti, Rome, Italy
Vittorio Lingiardi, Rome, Italy
Borderline personality disorder and developmental
disorders
Chairperson: Andrea Fossati, Rome, Italy
Speaker:
Alexandra Philipsen, Freiburg, Germany
oo1
Personality patterns / disorders, mental functioning and
symptoms: From PDM to PDM-2
Vittorio Lingiardi, Rome, Italy
oo2
Assessing personality disorders with the PDM-2: The tools
section
Francesco Gazzillo, Rome, Italy
oo3
Borderline personality level of functioning: Case illus­
trations and PDM-2 profile
Franco del Corno, Milan, Italy
10:30 – 11:00 Break
PL-06
Plenary Session
14:45 – 15:30Auditorium Medici / Visconti
Developmental changes in the neuro-cognitive bases of
social cognition during adolescence
Chairperson: Martin Bohus, Mannheim, Germany
Speaker:
Kathrin Cohen Kadosh, Oxford,
United Kingdom
Closing Ceremony
15:30 – 16:00Auditorium Medici / Visconti
KL-02
Keynote Lecture
Closing ceremony
11:00 – 12:30Auditorium Medici / Visconti
What I have changed my mind about
Chairperson: Martin Bohus, Mannheim, Germany
Lecturer:
Peter Fonagy, London, United Kingdom
YRA-01
Young Researcher Award Session
12:30 – 13:00Auditorium Medici / Visconti
Chairperson: Martin Bohus, Mannheim, Germany
Speaker: Michael Kaess, Heidelberg, Germany
13:00 – 14:00 Break
KL-02 / PL-05 / PL-06: Simultaneous translation in Italian language provided.
33
Poster Presentations
Meet the poster authors
Authors have been requested to stay at their posters on Friday, 17 October and Saturday, 18 October during the lunch break.
P-01
Poster Tour
Miscellaneous
001
Reactive aggression and ADHD: An explorative fMRI study
Sarah Bubenzer-Busch, Aachen, Germany
Gereon Fink, Beate Herpertz-Dahlmann, Bojana
Kuzmanovic, Tilman Gaber, Katrin Helmbold, Marcus
Ullisch, David Baurmann, Simon Eickhoff, Florian Zepf
002
Anger and aggression in borderline personality disorder
and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: Does stress
matter?
Sylvia Cackowski, Mannheim, Germany
Annegret Krause-Utz, Julia van Eijk, Esther Sobanski,
Gabriele Ende, Christian Schmahl
003
The triarchic model of psychopathy in adolescence: Pre­
li­mi­nary reports
Antonella Somma, Rome, Italy
Roberta Siniscalchi
004
Psychometric properties of the Italian translation of the
child problematic traits inventory
Antonella Somma, Rome, Italy
Bianca de Cesaris, Martina Alati
005
Young people with emerging personality disorders:
A service proposal
Christopher Gordon, Yeovil, United Kingdom
Jane Yeandle, Ruth Habberfield, Liz Fawkes, Elizabeth
Challis
006
Eating disorders treated with transference focussed
psychotherapy‘s criteria: A case study
Susanna Ongarato, Treviso, Italy
Anna Urbani
007
The intergenerational transmission of personality related
vulnerabilities to psychopathology
Sara Casalin, Leuven, Belgium
34
008
Developing a specific targeted and time-limited programme
for addressing suicide risk in a high risk population of
female inpatients
Paul Stankard, Leeds, United Kingdom
First findings from the validation of an English version of
the operationalized psychodynamic diagnosis structure
questionnaire (Opd-sq) – from a community and
personality disordered sample
Tobias Nolte, London, United Kingdom
Johannes Ehrenthal, Johannes Zimmermann, Henning
Schauenburg, Peter Fonagy
P-02
Poster Tour
Adolescence
001
Short-term psychotherapeutic treatment in adolescents
engaging in non-suicidal self-injury: A randomized
controlled trial
Gloria Fischer, Heidelberg, Germany
Romuald Brunner, Peter Parzer, Franz Resch, Michael
Kaess
002
Psychometric properties of the Italian translation of the
borderline personality features scale for children-11
Antonella Somma, Rome, Italy
Davide Carlotta
003
Mentalization-based therapy: Group-treatment for adoles­
cence (MBT-GA) with subthreshold and full borderline
personality disorder – experiences from piloting a ran­
domized controlled trial
Sune Bo, Roskilde, Denmark
Emma Beck, Liselotte Pedersen, Jesper Pedersen,
Michael Gade Maagensen, Erik Simonsen
Poster Presentations
005
Tailoring treatment of borderline personality in adoles­
cence: Feedback and service developments
Claire Hepworth, London, United Kingdom
Catherine Ames
005
Self-criticism, dependency and borderline adolescents‘
externalizing and internalizing problems
Sandro de Santis, Palermo, Italy
Giorgio Falgares
006
Childhood adversity, bonding and family functioning:
Is there a specific association with borderline personality
disorder in adolescents?
Maria Rita Infurna, Palermo, Italy
Peter Parzer, Francesca Giannone, Franz Resch, Romuald
Brunner, Michael Kaess
006
Dimensionally measured personality traits as predictors
of dropout from mindfulness-based cognitive therapy
for depression
Jacob Sander Hansen, Glostrup, Denmark
Ralf Jensen
P-03
Poster Tour
Anxiety Disorder
002
Self-esteem and interpersonal problems in personality
disorders: A comparison of avoidant personality disorder
and borderline personality disorder
Riad Shenar, Guenzburg, Germany
Diana Braakmann, Manuela Dudeck
003
An effective neurofeedback treatment on a clinical case
of anxiety
Marta Aliño Costa, València, Spain
Marien Gadea, Evelio Garijo, Raul Espert, Alicia Salvador
P-04
Poster Tour
Depression
002
A genetic variant in 12q13 associated with depression
accounting for stressful life events, personality and
candidate genetic variants
Ayu Shimasaki, Kutsukake-Cho, Toyoake, Aichi, Japan
Kosei Esaki, Kenji Kondo, Takeo Saito, Hiroyuki Kimura,
Kengo Miyahara, Masashi Ikeda, Nakao Iwata
007
Personality and emotional experience in depressed
patients with and without borderline personality disorder
Ulrike Dinger, Heidelberg, Germany
Johanna Köhling, Henning Schauenburg, Johannes
C. Ehrenthal
P-05
Poster Tour
Dialectical Behavioral Therapy
001
DBT skills training in alcohol dependence treatment:
A preliminary study
Marco Cavicchioli, Milan, Italy
Maria Grazia Movalli, Camilla Ciliberti, Martina Testa
002
Dialectical behavior therapy for borderline personality
disorder and anorexia nervosa comorbidity: A case study
Maria Vicenta Navarro Haro, Seattle, USA
Azucena Garcia Palacios, Cristina Botella
003
Care for people with borderline personality disorder in
Ottawa, Canada: Innovation and integration
Deanna Mercer, Ottawa, Canada
Marjorie Robb, Karin Stojsic, Helen Gottfried-Unruh,
Dana Kochanowicz, Craig Defries, Brian Oelberg, Brenda
Moore, Christine Dickson
003
Relationship of suicide risk with early life stress and
resilience in patients with major depressive disorder
Jeong-Ho Seok, Seoul, Republic of Korea
Kyu-Hyeong Huh, Won-Jung Choi
35
Poster Presentations
004
The use of dialectical behavior therapy skills in a clinical
sample: Initial findings on the Italian version of the DBT
ways of coping checklist
Emanuela Roder, Milan, Italy
Mauro Cavarra, Nicolò Gaj, Raffaele Visintini,
Cesare Maffei
005
The national DBT project, Ireland: Evaluating the effective­
ness of dialectical behaviour therapy in a communitybased adolescent sample
Daniel Flynn, Cork, Ireland
Mary Kells, Mary Joyce, Catalina Suarez
006
The use of virtual reality to facilitate mindfulness practice
in dialectical behavior therapy for borderline personality
disorder: A case report
Maria Vicenta Navarro Haro, Seattle, USA
Hunter Hoffman, Azucena Garcia Palacios,
Marsha Linehan
007
Catamnestic survey of side effects of dialectical behavioral
therapy in a day clinic setting (DBT-DC)
Christoph Richter, Berlin, Germany
Eva-Lotta Brakemeier
008
Catamnestic survey on sustainable effect after day clinic
DBT in function of various parameters
Christoph Richter, Berlin, Germany
Eva-Lotta Brakemeier
009
Remission, recovery and quality of life: A 15-year followup of borderline personality disorder
Marie-Luise Zeitler, Mannheim, Germany
Rebekka Knies, Sabina Misoch, Nikolaus Kleindienst,
Christian Schmahl, Martin Bohus
P-06
Poster Tour
Dissociation
001
State-dissociation interferes with instrumental learning
in borderline personality disorder
Christian Paret, Mannheim, Germany
Steffen Hösterey, Gabriele Ende, Christian Schmahl
36
002
Influence of peritraumatic dissociation on psychopathology
and psychophysiology of borderline personality disorder
Dana Maria Bichescu-Burian, Ravensburg, Germany
Jürgen Steyer, Tilman Steinert
003
The dissociative experiences scale-revised: Factor structure
of an Italian version
Carlo Garofalo, Rome, Italy
Aristide Saggino, Marco Tommasi, Patrizia Velotti, Giulio
Cesare Zavattini
004
The role of dissociation in BPD: Review of research data
Andrea Scalabrini, Milan, Italy
P-07
Poster Tour
Emotion Regulation
003
Separating social and non social emotion regulation in the
brain: Source and voxel based morphometry
Alessandro Grecucci, Rovereto, Italy
Roma Siugzdaite, Remo Job
004
Use of paliperidone palmitate long acting injection in the
treatment of impulsive-aggressive personality
Ana Montes, Madrid, Spain
Nerea Palomares Mora, María Lourdes González Cordon,
Marina Díaz Marsá, Julia García-Albea, Sara Gonzälez
Vives, Rafael Fernández García-Andrade, Patricia Gómez
Merino, Jose Luis Carrasco Perera
005
Understanding mindfulness deficits in borderline perso­
nality disorder
Hannah Scheibner, Berlin, Germany
Stefan Roepke, John-Dylan Haynes, Anna Stippl, Anna
Daniels, Felix Bermpohl
Poster Presentations
006
Characterizing feeling of emptiness as a psychological
dimension in general population: Development of a
specific instrument
Nerea Palomares Mora, Madrid, Spain
José Luis Carrasco
007
Social feedback and emotion regulation in borderline
personality disorder: A fMRI study
Charlotte van Schie, Leiden, The Netherlands
Chui-De Chiu, Bert van Klaveren, Bianca van den Bulk,
Serge Rombouts, Willem Heiser, Bernet Elzinga
009
Rates and factors associated with drop-out in a short term
day hospital programme
Chantal Messier, Montreal, Canada
Pierre David, Fréderic Perusse, Samia Saadi
010
Steps programme and emotional dysregulation: A process
study
Silvia Boccalon, Milan, Italy
Roberta Alesiani, Laura Giarolli, Andrea Fossati
011
Neurocognitive mechanisms of social emotion regulation:
Functional, connectivity and structural evidence
Alessandro Grecucci, Rovereto, Italy
013
Cultural adaptation and integrated treatment model for
clients with emotional dysregulation
Guillermo Lencioni, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Marcelo Sandomirsky
014
Differential motives in anger-aggression episodes: Experi­
mential avoidance and revenge
Guillermo Lencioni, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Aníbal Segade, Marcelo Sandomirsky
015
Borderline personality disorder and empathic dysfunction:
A systematic review
Raquel Pedrosa, Porto, Portugal
Margarida Figueiredo-Braga, António Bastos-Leite,
Rui Mota-Cardoso
016
Disturbed agency and intimacy in life-story episodes
and the episodes induced affective reactions and their
association with early maladaptive schemas in patients
with borderline personality disorder
Zsolt Unoka, Budapest, Hungary
Julia Horvath, Pálma V. Docsa, Tamás Gábor Debreczeni,
Emma Naszvadi, Eszter Beran
017
Beyond borderline personality disorder: Emotion-dys­regu­
lation predicts cluster B personality disorders
Patrizia Velotti, Genoa, Italy
Carlo Garofalo, Antonino Callea, Giancarlo Dimaggio
018
Mentalization and strong evaluation. Towards a more
anthropological concept of emotion regulation
Dirk von Boetticher, Göttingen, Germany
P-08
Poster Tour
Epidemiology
003
Personality disorders and learning difficulties / problems
in adults
Konstantinos Taliouridis, Lausanne, Switzerland
Eric Chalet
004
Treatment incidence of personality disorders in the
psychiatric case register of The Hague, The Netherlands
Ellen Willemsen, Den Haag, The Netherlands
Albert van Hemert
P-09
Poster Tour
Family
001
Verbal abuse and borderline personality disorder: Its eva­
lu­ation in a clinical case
Osmano Oasi, Milan, Italy
Sara Vecchi
37
Poster Presentations
003
Transmission of traumatic childhood experiences across
generations: Mother-child interaction in mothers with
borderline personality disorder
Dorothea Kluczniok, Berlin, Germany
004
Childhood trauma, levels of personality functioning, and
adult attachment
Johannes C. Ehrenthal, Heidelberg, Germany
Ulrike Dinger, Kai Fischer, Christian Mölle, Henning
Schauenburg, Christoph Nikendei
P-10
Poster Tour
General Psychiatric Management
001
The integration of psychotherapeutic and rehabilitative
services in a therapeutic community for treatment and
social reintegration of borderline personality disorders
Rita Bisanti, Monticello Brianza, Italy
Andrea Coden, Elisabetta Pellegrini, Salvatore Damiano,
Paola Vimercati, Raffaele Pagani, Giorgio Rezzonico
002
The implementation of a general psychiatric management
for borderline personality disorder in the Bologna mental
health department
Biancamaria Bortolotti, Bologna, Italy
Marco Monari, Valentina Bandieri, Valentina Manzo,
Francesca Martino, Marco Menchetti, Claudia Nespeca,
Anna Sasdelli, Paola Tedesco, Lorenza Tonti, Domenico
Berardi
003
Difficulties in treatment of people with personality
borderline and antisocial disorder at Dubrava prison
(Kosovo)
Fahri Drevinja, Prishtina, Kosovo
Shpend Haxhibeqiri, Naim Fanaj, Gani Halilaj, Nysret
Pepaj, Valdete Haxhibeqiri
38
004
Hospitalization of patient with personality disorder in
university psychiatric clinic in Pristina between January
2013 until February 2014
Shpend Haxhibeqiri, Prishtina, Kosovo
Fahri Drevinja, Naim Fanaj, Gani Halilaj, Shukrije
Statovci, Valdete Haxhibeqiri, Muhamet Karameta,
Bekim Radoniqi, Sami Rexhepi
005
Strategic issues in the psychotherapy of patients with
prominent narcissistic pathology
Paul Links, London, Canada
Ajay Prakash
006
Developing a formulation tool for use within generalist
personality disorder treatment settings
Jane Yeandle, Yeovil, United Kingdom
Liz Fawkes, Chris Gordon, Elizabeth Challis
P-11
Poster Tour
Genetic, Environment
002
Case-control association study between 96 stress-related
polymorphisms and borderline personality disorder
Ana Martín-Blanco, Barcelona, Spain
Marc Ferrer, Daniel Vega, Oscar Andion, Cristina
Sánchez-Mora, Juliana Salazar, Matilde Elices, M Jesús
Arranz, Joaquim Soler, Juan Carlos Pascual
P-12
Poster Tour
Healthcare and Economics
001
Use of mental healthcare services by borderline personality
disorder patients in Catalonia, Spain
Monica Prat, Barcelona, Spain
Marc Ferrer, Luis Salvador-Carulla, Murielle Bendeck,
Carmen Barral, Oscar Andion, Natalia Calvo, Miquel Casas
Poster Presentations
002
A global evaluation system for personality disorder
services: Measuring outputs and reporting evidence (more)
Christopher Gordon, Yeovil, United Kingdom
Jane Yeandle, Liz Fawkes, Elizabeth Challis
003
Factors associated with high use of psychiatric services
by patients with borderline personality disorder
Cátia Guerra, Porto, Portugal
Raquel Pedrosa
004
Difficult patients or structural difficulties? Understanding
the source of stigma for BPD
Sandra Sulzer, Chapel Hill, USA
P-13
Poster Tour
P-14
Poster Tour
Neurobiology
001
How does maternal borderline personality disorder and
childhood trauma influence children‘s hormonal reactions:
The role of maternal hostility
Dorothea Kluczniok, Berlin, Germany
Stefan Roepke, Christine Heim, Ulrike Lehmkuhl,
Catherine Hindi Attar, Daniel Führer, Katja Bödeker,
Felix Bermpohl
002
Reduced cerebellar glucose metabolism in borderline
personality disorder but not in bipolar II disorder
Erlend Boen, Oslo, Norway
Jon Erik Holtedahl, Trine Hjørnevik, Benjamin
Hummelen, Torbjørn Elvsåshagen, Almira Babovic,
Sigmund Karterud, Ulrik Fredrik Malt
Mentalization Based Therapy
001
Anxious attachment and uncertainty about mental states
in borderline personality disorder
Deborah Badoud, Geneva, Switzerland
Charlotte Germond, Paco Prada, Rosetta Nicastro, Nader
Perroud, Patrick Luyten, Martin Debbané
002
Additional mentalization-based group therapy for female
inpatients with borderline personality disorder treated
with DBT
Marc-Andreas Edel, Gevelsberg, Germany
Giancarlo Dimaggio, Martin Brune
003
The development of the mentalizing capacity in the
psychodynamic psychotherapy of borderline personality
disorder as illustrated by a longitudinal case study
Matti Keinänen, Turku, Finland
004
Mentalization-based group therapy in the treatment of
university students with borderline personality disorder
Matti Keinänen, Turku, Finland
Minna Martin
P-15
Poster Tour
Nursing Care
001
Challenges for mental health nurses in promoting the
recovery of a client with borderline personality disorder:
Risky business
Teresa McDonagh, Navan, Co. Meath, Ireland
002
Improving nursing care for clients with borderline
personality disorder: A literature review
Teresa McDonagh, Navan, Co. Meath, Ireland
003
An evaluation of personality disorder training on inpatient
mental health staff
Christopher Gordon, Yeovil, United Kingdom
Jane Yeandle, Liz Fawkes, Elizabeth Challis
004
Challenges for mental health nurses in promoting the
recovery of a client with borderline personality disorder:
Risky business
Teresa McDonagh, Navan, Co. Meath, Ireland
39
Poster presentations
P-16
Poster Tour
Pharmacology
002
Adjunctive aripiprazole in the treatment of borderline
per­sonality disorder: A 3-months open study
Barbara Patrizi, Barcelona, Spain
Miquel Gasol
004
Clozapine treatment reducing aggression, emotional
dysregulation and self injurious behaviour for patients
with borderline personality disorder in a forensic setting
Katy Mason, Berkshire, United Kingdom
Fin Larkin, Darcy Brown, Samrat Sengupta, Jose
Romero-Urcelay, Callum Ross, Nitin Gupta, Morris
Vinestock, Mrigendra Das
P-17
Poster Tour
Psychopathology
003
The Italian version of the pathological narcissism inven­
tory: Factor structure and psychometric properties
Rossella Di Pierro, Milan, Italy
Fabio Madeddu, Antonios Dakanalis, Marcello Gallucci
004
The patients perceived changes during the therapeutic
community treatment of patients with borderline per­
sonality disorders
Rita Bisanti, Monticello Brianza, Italy
Paola Vimercati, Elisabetta Pellegrini, Salvatore
Damiano, Giorgio Rezzonico
005
Autobiographical memory in borderline personality
disorder
Morten Bech, Roskilde, Denmark
Ask Elklit, Erik Simonsen
006
Does personality disordered patients view themselves as
others view them?
Helena Espirito-Santo, Coimbra, Portugal
Carlo Garofalo, Mariana Marques, Inês Chiote-Rodrigues
40
007
Functional abnormalities of moral judgement in borderline
personality disorder: A bold fMRI study
Chiara Bulgarelli, Milan, Italy
Daniele Radaelli, Benedetta Vai, Sara Poletti, Andrea
Fossati, Cesare Maffei, Cristina Colombo, Francesco
Bendetti
008
Impulsivity in borderline personality disorder: Different
measures define different clinical profiles
Marc Ferrer, Barcelona, Spain
Mònica Prat, Natàlia Calvo, Mercedes Pérez-Rodríguez,
Antonia S. New, Larry J. Siever, Óscar Andión
009
Facial judgements of trustworthiness, dominance and
gender in borderline personality disorder
Zsolt Unoka, Budapest, Hungary
Klára Soltész-Várhelyi
010
The role of childhood trauma and personality traits on
dispositional mindfulness in individuals with borderline
personality disorder
Joaquim Soler, Barcelona, Spain
Matilde Elices, Ana Martin-Blanco, Albert Feliu-Soler,
Elisabet Ruiz, Cristina Carmona, Juan Carlos Pascual
012
Characterizing borderline personality disorder neuro­
psychological profile: A Pisa neuropsychology clinic study
Francesca Bosinelli, Sarzana, Italy
Marco Rosario Timpano Sportiello, Davide Maria
Cammisuli
013
Psychopathological functioning levels and their possible
relevance in psychotherapy for borderline and other
personality disorders
Andrea Ferrero, Turin, Italy
014
Is identity diffusion behind self-destructive behaviour in
borderline personality disorder?
Cátia Guerra, Porto, Portugal
Raquel Pedrosa
Poster presentations
015
A unified theoretical framework for understanding
suicidal and self-harming behavior: Synthesis of diverging
definitions and perspectives
Sophie Liljedahl, Lund, Sweden
Sofie Westling
016
Change in self-criticism and dependency is associated
with improvement in symptoms and well-being in a
heterogeneous sample of patients with a personality
disorder
Benedicte Lowyck, Kortenberg, Belgium
017
Relationship-specific attachment representations in
individuals with borderline personality organization
Monika Marszal, Poznañ, Poland
019
Anger rumination and aggressive behavior in cluster B
personality disorders
Francesca Martino, Bologna, Italy
Gabriele Caselli, Domenico Berardi, Francesca Fiore,
Erika Marino, Marco Menchetti, Elena Prunetti, Giovanni
Maria Ruggiero, Anna Sasdelli, Edward A. Selby, Sandra
Sasaroli
020
Rejection sensitivity and self-esteem in patients with
borderline personality disorder
Melanie Domsalla, Mannheim, Germany
Lisa Liebke, Janine Thome, Georgia Koppe, Christian
Schmahl, Martin Bohus
P-18
Poster Tour
Self-harm and Pain
001
Comparison of different pain modalities with incision pain
Polina Shabes, Mannheim, Germany
Ulf Baumgaertner, Christian Schmahl, Rolf-Detlef Treede
002
Sensory-affective interaction in borderline personality
disorder
Boo Young Chung, Mannheim, Germany
Robin Bekrater-Bodmann, Herta Flor
P-19
Poster Tour
Substance Use Disorders
001
Coping strategies, familial, environment and adherence
to treatment. Preliminary study on a sample of patients
in treatment by the department for alcoholism treatment
of the San Raffaele Hospital – Milan
Alessandra Zanichelli, Milan, Italy
Marina Rosaria Devoti, Maria Grazia Movalli
002
Benefits of DBT skills training in alcohol dependence
treatment in co-morbidity with personality disorders
Camilla Ciliberti, Milan, Italy
Marco Cavicchioli, Mariagrazia Movalli
004
A therapeutic community for women with dual diagnosis:
Residence for the treatment of sexually abused women.
Clinical reflections and hypotheses for intervention in the
therapeutic community fermata d‘autobus
Davide Elos, Favria, Italy
Maria Giovanna Urgo
P-20
Poster Tour
Suicidality
001
Suicide attempt self-injury interview (SASII): Preliminary
data on validity and inter-rater reliability of its Italian
translation in a clinical sample
Emanuela Roder, Milan, Italy
Ottavia Passaquindici, Nicolò Gaj, Raffaele Visintini,
Cesare Maffei
002
Identity disturbance and borderline personality disorder
features among families with suicidal youth
Erin Kaufman, Salt Lake City, USA
Sheila Crowell
003
Introducing and developing dynamic deconstructive
psychotherapy within the UK: A forensic inpatient service
for women with complex presentations
Paul Stankard, Leeds, United Kingdom
003
Non-suicidal self-injury, emotional dysregulation and sen­
sation seeking in clinical, forensic and community adults
Griseila Cruz-Roman, Trujillo Alto, Puerto Rico
Maria Velez-Pastrana, Domingo Marques
41
Congress Information
Registration Fees
Congress Registration Fees
EUR
Non-Members
700,00
Member ISSPD / ISTSS / BIGSPD
650,00
Members ESSPD
560,00
Health Care Professional
(Nurses or Social Workers)*
440,00
Students / Co-Assistant*
300,00
*A certificate must be handed in together with the registration.
CME Courses 16 October 2014
CME-Course Congress Participant
CME-Course without congress
participation Member ESSPD
ESSPD Networking Dinner
17 October 2014
EUR
170,00
230,00
55,00
The congress registration fee for participants includes:
e Admission to all scientific sessions
e Final printed programme
e Admission to the poster exhibition
e Certificate of attendence
e Coffee break
CME courses are not included in the congress registration
fee and have to be booked separately.
On-site registration will be processed on a first-come,
first-served basis. Priority will be given to pre-registered
delegates.
Congress Registration Counter
All congress materials and documentation will be available
from the congress registration counter located in the Foyer
dei Patrizi of the Sheraton Roma Hotel & Conference Center.
Opening Hours
Wednesday, 15 October 2014
17:00-19:00
Thursday, 16 October 2014
07:00-19:00
Friday, 17 October 2014
08:00-18:00
Saturday, 18 October 2014
08:30-15:30
During these opening hours the congress counter can be
reached at: Phone: +39 – 06 – 54537044
Congress Programme and Abstracts
The final congress programme will be issued to all registered
attendees at the congress in the Sheraton Roma Hotel &
Conference Center and is also available at the congress
website. All accepted abstracts are published online at
www.borderline-congress.org
42
Congress Programme Changes
The organisers cannot assume liability for any changes in
the congress programme due to external or unforeseen
circumstances.
Media and Speakers Centre
The Media and Speakers Centre is located in room Giotto.
Speakers are asked to hand in their CD-ROM or USB stick
containing the PowerPoint Presentation (IBM format or
compatible, no multisession) preferably 3 hours before their
presentation. The presentation will be transferred to the
central congress server and will be available afterwards on
a special congress notebook in the hall of presentation. Due
to time and technical reasons we kindly ask the speakers
not to use their own notebook. Technical staff will be happy
to assist you.
Opening Hours
Thursday, 16 October 2014
Friday, 17 October 2014
Saturday, 18 October 2014
07:00-17:30
08:00-17:00
08:00-15:00
operated by
Estensis GmbH – the Conference Company
CME Accreditation
The 3rd International Congress on Borderline Personality
Disorder' is accredited by the European Accreditation
Council for Continuing Medical Education (EACCME) to
provide the following CME activity for medical specialists.
The EACCME is an institution of the European Union of
Medical Specialists (UEMS), www.uems.net.
The 3rd International Congress on Borderline Personality
Disorder ' is designated for a maximum of (or 'for up to')
14 hours of European external CME credits. Each medical
specialist should claim only those hours of credit that he /
she actually spent in the educational activity.
Each ‘CME course of the 3rd International Congress
on Borderline Personality Disorder' is designated for a
maximum of (or 'for up to') 3 hours of European external
CME credits. Each medical specialist should claim only
those hours of credit that he / she actually spent in the
educational activity.
Through an agreement between the European Union of
Medical Specialists and the American Medical Association,
physicians may convert EACCME credits to an equivalent
number of AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™. Information
on the process to convert EACCME credit to AMA credit
can be found at www.ama-assn.org/go/internationalcme.
Congress Information
Live educational activities, occurring outside of Canada,
recognized by the UEMS-EACCME for ECMEC credits are
deemed to be Accredited Group Learning Activities (Section
1) as defined by the Maintenance of Certification Programme
of The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada.
Participants interested in obtaining EACCME credits and
CME credits may contact the staff at the registration counter
on the last day of attendance in order to receive a printed
copy of their accreditation certificate.
Congress Language
The official language of the 3rd International Congress
on Borderline Personality Disorder is English. Selected
sessions will be simultaneously translated in Italian.
Name Badges
Participants are kindly requested to wear their name badge
at all times during the congress including the opening
ceremony and get together.
Poster Exhibition
The poster exhibition is located in hall La Piazzetta. The
posters will be sorted by topics and will be numbered within
those topics. The poster exhibition is open to all participants.
Set up and dismantling times for posters
Posters need to be set up and dismantled within the follow­
ing times:
Set up:
Thursday, 16 October 2014 08:00 – 12:00
Dismantling: Saturday, 18 October 2014 14:00 – 16:00 Posters which have not been removed within the indicated
time schedule will be removed.
Meet the poster authors during the lunch break at 12:30 to
13:30 on Friday, 17 October 2014 and Saturday, 18 October
2014 at their posters in hall La Piazzetta.
The following exhibitors will be present during the
congress days:
a Wisepress Ltd.
a Raffaello Cortina Editore
ESSPD Networking Dinner
The congress networking dinner will take place on Friday,
17 October 2014 at the Osteria Checco Er Carettiere.
All attendees are invited. A delicious Italian four course
menu will be served from 20:00, the social evening will start
from 19:30. No transportation is provided. Tickets are still
available at the counter on a 'first-come, first-served' basis.
Price per person: EUR 55,00
incl. wine and water
Address
Osteria Checco Er Carettiere
Via Benedetta 10
00153 Roma, Italy
How to get from the airport to the
Sheraton Roma Hotel & Conference Centre
Rome has two airports, Rome Leonardo da Vinci / Fiumicino
airport (major airlines and oversea flights) is located
approximately 15km west of the congress venue, Rome
Ciampino airport is located approximately 30km south-east
of the congress venue.
From Leonardo da Vinci / Fiumicino airport:
A regular bus service is connecting the Sheraton Roma
Hotel & Conference Centre with the airport. Duration
depending on traffic 20-30 minutes. Ticket price EUR 7.
The timetable and further information can be found on
www.sheratonrome.com/en/rome-airport-hotel-bus-service .
From Ciampino airport:
A taxi ride is recommended from Ciampino airport to the
Sheraton Roma Hotel & Conference Centre. Some taxi
companies offer a fixed price of EUR 55 one way.
Hotel Shuttle
The Sheraton Roma Hotel & Conference Centre offers a
regular shuttle service between Rome downtown (Via del
Teatro Marcel) and the hotel. The timetable and further
information can be found on http://www.sheratonrome.
com/en/bus-service-to-city-center-rome.
Public Transportation
By underground: Blue line B from Rome central station
direction Laurentina, get of at EUR Magliana station – just
8 minutes walking distance to Sheraton Hotel Roma &
Conference Centre.
43
conGress InforMatIon
Parking
Parking space is available next to the Sheraton Hotel Roma
and Conference Centre. Parking fees are not included in
the registration fee.
currency
The official Italian currency is Euro. Exchange of foreign
currency is available at Rome airport and at most hotels,
banks and exchange offices throughout the city.
Press
Journalists should bring their press ID and register at the
registration counter at the Foyer dei Patrizi of the Sheraton
Roma Hotel & Conference Centre.
may be incurred by the congress participants or by any
person accompanying them, during either the official
activities. Participants are advised to take out insurance
against loss, accidents or damage that could be incurred
during the congress.
safety
As in all major cities and congress venues, people should
take care of their personal belongings. It is not advised to
wear your badge outside the Borderline Congress activities
and special events.
General conditions
Apply according to the website:
www.borderline-congress.org.
Isurance / liability
Third International Congress on Borderline does not accept
any liability for damages and/or losses of any kind which
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14193 Berlin
fon
+49-30-300 669 0
fax
+49-30-305 73 91
Email: berlin@cpo-hanser.de
www.cpo-hanser.de
44
HAMBURG
Zum Ehrenhain 34
22885 Barsbüttel
fon
+49-40-670 882 0
fax
+49-40-670 32 83
Email: hamburg@cpo-hanser.de
FRANKFURT
Julius-Reiber-Strasse 15a
64293 Darmstadt
fon: +49-6151-428 368 0
fax: +49-6151-428 368 9
Email: frankfurt@cpo-hanser.de
Index of Chairpersons, Authors and Co-Authors
A
Abler, B. ...................................26
Aceti, F. .....................................23
Adshead, G. ..............................17
Aguilar, S. .................................32
Alati, M. ....................................34
Albardier, W. ............................12
Albert, A. ..................................17
Alesiani, R. ...............................37
Aliño Costa, M. .........................35
Allen, J. .....................................17
Allen, N. ....................................26
Allroggen, M. ...........................22
Alvarez-Tomás, I. ......................25
Ames, C. ...................................35
Ammaniti, M. ......................14, 33
Andión, G. ..........................30, 40
Andion, O. ................................38
Andrea, S. .................................16
Antonsen, B. .............................28
AragonGs, E. ............................30
Arefjord, N. ...............................17
Arranz, M. J. .............................38
B
Babovic, A. ...............................39
Bach, B. ....................................30
Badoud, D. ................................39
Bär, K.-J. ...................................14
Bailey, R. ..................................25
Bales, D. ...................................21
Balsis, S. ...................................13
Bandieri, V. ...............................38
Barnhart, R. ..............................21
Barone, L. .................................31
Barral, C. ..................................38
Bastos-Leite, A. ........................37
Bateman, A. ........8, 18, 20, 21, 30
Baumgaertner, U. .........14, 19, 41
Bauriedl-Schmidt, C. ................23
Baurmann, D. ...........................34
Beblo, T. ...................................28
Bech, M. ...................................40
Beck, E. ....................................34
Bekrater-Bodmann, R. ..14, 19, 41
Bellino, S. .................................10
Bendeck, M. .......................30, 38
Bender, D. ..................................9
Bendetti, F. ...............................40
Benecke, C. ..........................9, 23
Beran, E. ...................................37
Berardi, D. ....................12, 38, 41
Berger, M. ................................27
Berghuis, H. ...............................9
Bermpohl, F. .......................36, 39
Bertsch, K. ..........................14, 18
Berube, F.-A. ...........12, 13, 14, 32
Betts, J. ...............................13, 26
Betts, J. K. ................................14
Bhaduri, A. ...............................14
Bichescu-Burian, D. M. ............36
Bilek, E. ..............................24, 32
Bisanti, R. ...........................38, 40
Black, D. .......................17, 19, 23
Blum, N. .........................8, 19, 23
Boccalon, S. ..............................37
Bödeker, K. ...............................39
Boen, E. ....................................39
Bohus, M. ......8, 9, 10, 14, 19, 21,
.........................24, 26, 27, 28, 30,
..........................31, 32, 33, 36, 41
Bonenberger, M. ......................26
Borroni, S. ..........................16, 30
Bortolotti, B. .............................38
Borzutzky, A. ............................22
Bo, S. ........................................34
Bosinelli, F. ...............................40
Botella, C. .................................35
Bouwman, R. ............................11
Bozzatello, P. ............................10
Braakmann, D. ..........................35
Brakemeier, E.-L. ......................36
BrodfGhrer, A. ..........................27
Brown, D. .................................40
Bruehl, A. .................................24
Brune, M. ...........................28, 39
Brunner, R. ..................10, 17, 22,
......................................26, 34, 35
Bubenzer-Busch, S. ............17, 34
Buchheim, A. ................17, 23, 25
Buchheim, P. ............................25
Buer Christensen, T. ...................9
Bulgarelli, C. .............................40
Buonocore, L. ...........................28
C
Cabrini, S. .................................31
Cabrino, C. ...............................11
Cackowski, S. ...............19, 31, 34
Cack, S. .....................................24
Cailhol, L. ...........................12, 32
Cain, N. .....................................11
Caligor, E. .................................19
Callea, A. ..................................37
Calvo, N. .......................30, 38, 40
Cammisuli, D. M. ......................40
Carcione, A. ..............................20
Carlotta, D. ...............................34
Carlson, E. ................................13
Carmona, C. ..............................40
Carpenter, R. ..............................9
Carpenter, R. W. ...................9, 14
Carrasco, J. L. .....................32, 37
Carrasco Perera, J. L. ...............36
Carretta, I. ................................27
Casalin, S. .................................34
Casas, M. ............................30, 38
Caselli, G. .................................41
Cavarra, M. ...............................36
Cavicchioli, M. ....................35, 41
Cervantes, A. ............................27
Chalet, E. ............................18, 37
Challis, E. .....................34, 38, 39
Chanen, A. ...................10, 13, 14,
................................17, 22, 26, 31
Chapman, A. .......................10, 16
Charbon, P. ...............................28
Chiesa, M. ................................23
Chiote-Rodrigues, I. .................40
Chiu, C.-D. ................................37
Choi-Kain, L. .......................19, 26
Choi, W.-J. ................................35
Christian, S. ..............................32
Chung, B. Y. ..................14, 19, 41
Ciliberti, C. .........................35, 41
Clare, D. ....................................23
Clarkin, A. .................................14
Clarkin, J. ......................11, 14, 22
Clement, O. ...............................25
Coden, A. ..................................38
Cohen Kadosh, K. .....................33
Colla, M. ...................................27
Colle, L. ..............................20, 27
Colombo, C. ..............................40
Conti, C. ....................................31
Corcos, M. ................................32
Corzani, S. ................................25
Costa, S. ...................................12
Cozzolino, E. .............................31
Crepaldi, I. ................................31
Crockett, M. ..............................17
Crowell, S. ..........................31, 41
Cruz-Roman, G. ..................30, 41
D
Dahmen, B. ...............................17
Dakanalis, A. .............................40
Daltrozzo, T. .............................23
Damiano, S. ........................38, 40
Dammann, G. ...........................23
d'Andrea, W. .............................31
Daniels, A. ................................36
Das, M. .....................................40
David, P. ........................12, 32, 37
DebbanG, M. ......................22, 39
Debreczeni, T. G. ......................37
de Cesaris, B. ...........................34
del Corno, F. .............................33
Defries, C. .................................35
Delvenne, V. .............................32
de Matteis, V. ...........................32
Demetrovics, Z. ........................30
Demirakca, T. ...........................19
de Panfilis, C. ............................11
de Ruiter, M. B. ........................26
de Saeger, H. ........................9, 15
de Santis, S. ..............................35
Désilets, M. ...............................32
Devoti, M. R. .............................41
DeYoung, C. ..............................20
Díaz Marsá, M. .........................36
Diamond, D. .................12, 16, 19
Dickson, C. ...............................35
Dieben, K. .................................12
Dimaggio, G. ................28, 37, 39
Dinger, U. .....................22, 35, 38
Di Pierro, R. ..............................40
Diwadkar, V. .............................32
Dixon-Gordon, K. .....................10
Docsa, P. V. ...............................37
Doering, S. ...............8, 22, 23, 25
Domes, G. .................................13
Domsalla, M. ....14, 24, 28, 32, 41
Dorrepaal, E. ............................26
Draijer, N. .................................26
Draisci, A. .................................31
Drevinja, F. ...............................38
Driessen, M. .................18, 24, 28
Dubose, A. ....................10, 16, 29
Dudeck, M. ...............................35
Dyer, A. ...............................26, 30
Dziobek, I. ....................13, 18, 28
E
Ebner-Priemer, U. ......................9
Edel, M.-A. ..........................28, 39
Ehrenthal, J. .............................34
Ehrenthal, J. C. .............22, 35, 38
Eickhoff, S. ...............................34
Eisert, A. ...................................17
Elices, M. ............................38, 40
Elklit, A. ....................................40
Elos, D. .....................................41
Elvsåshagen, T. .........................39
Elzinga, B. ..........................31, 37
Elzinga, B. M. ...........................26
Ende, G. ............19, 24, 31, 34, 36
Esaki, K. ....................................35
Eschstruth, R. .............................9
Espert, R. ..................................35
Espirito-Santo, H. .....................40
F
Falgares, G. ..............................35
Falkai, P. ...................................23
Falkenström, F. .........................17
Fanaj, N. ...................................38
Fantini, F. ..................................23
Fantoni, G. ................................27
Fawkes, L. .....................34, 38, 39
Feenstra, D. ........................15, 17
Feliu-Soler, A. ...........................40
Ferdinando, A. ..........................16
Fernando, S. .............................28
Fernandez
García-Andrade, R. ...................36
Ferrara, M. ...............................23
Ferrer, M. .....................30, 38, 40
Ferrero, A. ................................40
Figueiredo-Braga, M. ...............37
Fink, G. .....................................34
Fiore, D. ........................20, 27, 31
Fiore, F. ....................................41
Fischer, G. ..............10, 17, 22, 34
Fischer, K. ................................38
Fischer-Kern, M. ......................25
Fleischer, J. ...............................18
Flor, H. ..........................14, 19, 41
Flynn, D. .............................25, 36
Foelsch, P. ................................15
Fonagy, P. ....................18, 20, 22,
................................23, 25, 33, 34
Fontana, A. ...............................14
Fossati, A. ....................16, 20, 23,
..........................27, 31, 33, 37, 40
Franklin, J. ................................11
Frewen, P. .................................24
Fruzzetti, A. ........................15, 21
Führer, D. .................................39
Fydrich, T. ................................27
G
Gaber, T. ...................................34
Gaber, T. J. ................................17
Gadea, M. .................................35
Gade Maagensen, M. ...............34
Gaebel, A. ...........................14, 18
Gaj, N. ....................27, 31, 36, 41
Gallucci, M. ..............................40
Garcia-Albea, J. ........................36
Garcia Palacios, A. ..............35, 36
Garijo, E. ..................................35
Garofalo, C. ...................36, 37, 40
Gasol, M. ......................25, 27, 40
Gasol, X. .............................25, 27
Gazzillo, F. ................................33
Georgia, K. ...............................32
Gerchen, M. ..............................32
Germond, C. .............................39
Gescher, D. .........................14, 18
Giacchetti, N. ............................23
Giannone, F. .............................35
Giarolli, L. .................................37
Gleeson, J. ................................14
Goerg, N. ..................................27
Gómez Merino, P. .....................36
González Cordon, M. L. ............36
González Vives, S. ....................36
Goodman, M. ............................26
Gordon, C. ....................34, 38, 39
Gorska, D. .................................20
Gottfried-Unruh, H. ..................35
Graf, E. .....................................27
Gratz, K. ....................................10
Grecucci, A. ........................36, 37
Grenyer, B. ...............................25
45
Index of Chairpersons, Authors and Co-Authors
Groen, G. ..................................26
Groschwitz, R. ..........................26
Guardiano Payne, L. .................15
Guenot, F. .................................25
Guerra, C. ...........................39, 40
Gupta, N. ..................................40
Gutz, L. .....................................32
H
Habberfield, R. .........................34
Habel, U. ............................14, 17
Hahn, L. ......................................9
Halilaj, G. ..................................38
Hartveit Kvarstein, E. ...............25
Harvey, R. .................................19
Haxhibeqiri, S. .........................38
Haxhibeqiri, V. .........................38
Haynes, J.-D. ............................36
Heim, C. ....................................39
Heinrichs, M. ......................13, 27
Heiser, W. .................................37
Helmbold, K. ......................17, 34
Hende, B. ..................................30
Hepp, J. ................................9, 13
Hepworth, C. ............................35
Herbert, C. ................................28
Herpertz-Dahlmann, B. ......17, 34
Herpertz, S. ............14, 18, 24, 26
Herwig, U. ................................24
Herzog, J. .................................13
Hessels, C. ................................10
Hesse, M. ....................................9
Hilbig, B. E. ..............................13
Hindi Attar, C. ...........................39
Hinkelmann, K. .........................18
HjGrnevik, T. ............................39
Hoerz-Sagstetter, S. ...........23, 25
Hösterey, S. ..............................36
Hoffman, H. ..............................36
Hoffman, P. ...............................15
Holtedahl, J. E. .........................39
Horsch, L. .................................22
Horvath, J. ................................37
Houben, M. ................................9
Huber, C. G. ..............................21
Huh, K.-H. ................................35
Hula, A. .....................................20
Hummelen, B. ..........9, 13, 25, 39
Humphrey, M. ..........................17
Huss, M. ...................................27
Hutsebaut, J. .............9, 15, 17, 21
I
Ikeda, M. ..................................35
Imbimbo, A. ..............................28
Imesch, C. .................................28
Infurna, M. R. ...........................35
Ingenhoven, T. ................9, 11, 22
Ivanoff, A. .....................10, 16, 29
Iwata, N. ...................................35
Izurieta, N. ................................14
J
Jackson, G. ...............................30
Jackson, H. J. ............................14
Jacob, C. ...................................27
Jacob, G. .............................24, 27
Jahng, S. .....................................9
Janke, K. ...................................18
Jensen, R. .................................35
Job, N. ......................................12
Job, R. .......................................36
Jobst, A. ..............................17, 23
Johansen, M. ............................28
Jovev, M. .......................10, 13, 14
Joyce, M. ............................25, 36
Jullian, B. ..................................12
46
K
Kaasenbrood, A. ...................8, 12
Kaess, M. .....................10, 13, 14,
....................17, 22, 26, 33, 34, 35
Kamphuis, J. H. ....................9, 15
Karameta, M. ............................38
Karlgren, L. ..............................17
Karterud, S. ........9, 13, 17, 25, 39
Kassin, M. .................................22
Kathlen, P. ................................27
Kaufman, E. ........................31, 41
KeinGnen, M. ...........................39
Kells, M. .............................25, 36
Keng, S.-L. ................................21
Kernberg, O. .............................19
Kerslake, R. ........................13, 14
Kholmogorova, A. .....................21
Kieslich, P. J. .............................13
Kimura, H. ................................35
Kirsch, P. ............................24, 32
Kis, B. .......................................27
Kissell, R. ............................18, 19
Klasen, M. ................................17
Kleindienst, N. ...................10, 21,
................................26, 27, 30, 36
Kluczniok, D. ......................38, 39
Kluetsch, R. ........................19, 24
Knapen, S. ................................12
Knies, R. .............................10, 36
Kochanowicz, D. .......................35
Köhling, J. .................................35
Kölch, M. ..................................22
Koethe, D. .................................29
Kolly, S. ....................................28
Kondo, K. ..................................35
Konrad, K. ................................17
Koplin, K. ..................................28
Koppe, G. ................14, 24, 32, 41
Koudela-Hamila, S. .....................9
Kramer, M. ...............................20
Kramer, U. ..........................21, 28
Krause-Utz, A. ........19, 24, 31, 34
Krüger, A. .................................26
Krueger, R. ...............................20
Kuehl, L. ...................................18
Kuniss, S. ..................................19
Kuppens, P. .................................9
Kuzmanovic, B. ........................34
Kvarstein, E. .............................28
L
Lane, S. ...........................9, 13, 23
Lane, S. P. ...................................9
Lanius, R. .................................24
Larkin, F. ...................................40
Laurencin, G. ............................12
Laurenssen, A. ..........................21
Lehmkuhl, U. ............................39
Leipoldt, J. ................................18
Leising, D. ............................9, 13
Lencioni, G. ..............................37
Leoni, M. ..................................31
Lieb, K. .........................10, 24, 27
Liebke, L. ..........14, 24, 28, 32, 41
Liljedahl, S. ...............................41
Linehan, M. ........8, 10, 20, 29, 36
Lingiardi, V. ..............................33
Links, P. ..............................28, 38
Lis, S. ..........13, 14, 24, 28, 31, 32
Lombardo, A. ............................19
Lopez, L. .............................25, 27
Losasso et al., D. ......................31
Lowyck, B. ................................41
Ludaescher, P. ....................18, 29
LudGscher, P. ...........................27
Luijn, van, B. ............................12
Luyten, P. ................20, 21, 22, 39
M
Macdonald, K. ..........................19
Madeddu, F. ..............................40
Maffei, C. .......................9, 10, 27,
................................31, 36, 40, 41
Maier-Hein, K. ..........................26
Maillard, P. ...............................28
Malt, U. F. .................................39
Mancke, F. ................................14
Manzo, V. .................................38
Maraz, A. ..................................30
Marchesi, C. .............................11
Marco, J. ...................................32
Marin, A. ............................25, 27
Marino, E. .................................41
Markon, K. ................................20
Marques, D. ........................30, 41
Marques, M. .............................40
Marszal, M. .........................20, 41
Martina, J. ................................26
Martín-Blanco, A. .........32, 38, 40
Martin, M. ................................39
Martino, F. ....................12, 38, 41
Martin, S. ..................................12
Mason, K. .................................40
Mathews, A. ................................9
Mathys, C. ................................20
Matthies, S. ..............................27
Mauer, M.-C. ............................23
Maximov, A. .............................21
McCutcheon, L. ..................10, 17
McDonagh, T. ...........................39
McDougall, E. ...........................10
McMain, S. ...............................21
Meehan, K. ...............................11
Mehlum, L. .......................8, 9, 25
Menchetti, M. ...............12, 38, 41
Mercer, D. .................................35
Merlo, M. ..................................25
Messier, C. ................................37
Meyer-Lindenberg, A. ........24, 32
Miano, A. ..................................28
Michael, K. ...............................26
Minoudis, P. ........................15, 16
Misoch, S. .................................36
Miyahara, K. .............................35
Mölle, C. ...................................38
Möller, C. ..................................17
Monari, M. ................................38
Moncany, A.-H. .........................12
Montague, R. ............................20
Montano, A. ..............................28
Montes, A. ................................36
Moore, B. ..................................35
Morten, K.T. ..............................17
Mortensen, E. L. .......................30
Mosquera, D. ............................15
Mota-Cardoso, R. .....................37
Movalli, M. ...............................41
Movalli, M. G. .....................35, 41
Mucci, C. ..................................16
Müller-Engelmann, M. .............27
Murgo, L. ..................................31
N
Nachira, A. ...............................27
Nagy, K. ..............................14, 18
Nakar, O. ..................................22
Naoum, J. .................................11
Nassisi, V. .................................23
Naszvadi, E. ..............................37
Navarro Haro, M. V. ...........35, 36
Nespeca, C. ..............................38
New, A. ...........................8, 20, 25
New, A. S. .................................40
Newlin, E. .................................19
Nicastro, R. .........................12, 39
Nicolo, G. ............................20, 27
Niedeggen, M. ..........................32
Niedtfeld, I. ........................13, 26
Nikendei, C. ..............................38
Nivoli, A. M. A ....................25, 27
Nolte, T. ..............................20, 34
Nysæter, T. E. .............................9
Nyathi, Y. ..................................10
O
Oasi, O. .....................................37
Odom, A. ..................................15
Oei, N. ......................................31
Oelberg, B. ...............................35
Oldham, J. ..........................25, 26
Oltmanns, T. .............................13
Ongarato, S. .............................34
Onofri, A. ..................................15
Ottavi, P. ...................................28
Otte, C. ...............................18, 24
Ower, N. .............................13, 27
P
Padberg, F. .........................17, 23
Pagani, R. .................................38
Palomares Mora, N. ............36, 37
Palonta, B. ................................31
Paret, C. ........................19, 24, 36
Parzer, P. .....10, 17, 22, 26, 34, 35
Pascual, J. C. .................32, 38, 40
Pasinetti, M. .............................28
Passaquindici, O. ................27, 41
Patrick, C. .................................20
Patrizi, B. ......................25, 27, 40
Payne, L. ...................................21
Pedersen, G. ...................9, 13, 25
Pedersen, J. ..............................34
Pedersen, L. ..............................34
Pedone, R. ....................15, 20, 27
Pedrosa, R. ...................37, 39, 40
Pellecchia, g. ............................20
Pellegrini, E. .......................38, 40
Pepaj, N. ...................................38
Perera, S. ..................................26
Perez-Rodriguez, M. .....29, 31, 40
Perone, A. .................................31
Perroud, N. .........................12, 39
Perusse, F. ..........................12, 37
Pham-Scottez, A. ......................32
Philips, B. .................................17
Philipsen, A. .............8, 13, 27, 33
Pieraccioli, C. ...........................31
Piget, B. ....................................12
Pisani, A. ..................................11
Piscitelli, R. ...............................16
Piscitelli, S. ...............................16
Plener, P. ...................................26
Polak, M. ..................................22
Polari, A. ...................................14
Poletti, S. ..................................40
Popolo, R. .................................28
Porr, V. ................................16, 30
Prada, P. .............................12, 39
Prakash, A. ...............................38
Prat, M. .........................30, 38, 40
Preti, E. .....................................11
Priebe, K. ......................21, 26, 27
Prossin, A. ................................29
Prunas, A. .................................30
Prunetti, E. ...............................41
R
Rachini, A. ................................31
Radaelli, D. ...............................40
Radoniqi, B. ..............................38
Ramazzi, R. ...............................27
Rausch, J. .................................18
Index of Chairpersons, Authors and Co-Authors
Rausch, S. .................................27
Ravani, C. .................................12
Rehmann, P. .............................22
Reinhard, I. .................................9
Reitz, A.-C. ................................19
Reitz, S. ....................................11
Renneberg, B. ........17, 23, 30, 32
Rentrop, M. ..............................25
Resch, F. .....10, 17, 22, 26, 34, 35
Rexhepi, S. ...............................38
Rezzonico, G. ......................38, 40
Richetin, J. ................................11
Richman, M. .............................30
Richter, C. .................................36
Richter, J. ..................................26
Ridolfi, M. E. .......................15, 25
Riese, L. ......................................9
Rinne, T. ...................................16
Ritter, K. ...................................30
Riva, P. ......................................11
Robb, M. ...................................35
Roder, E. .......................27, 36, 41
Roepke, S. .............12, 18, 28, 30,
......................................32, 36, 39
Rösler, M. .................................27
Rombouts, S. ............................37
Romero-Urcelay, J. ...................40
Romine, RN, A. .........................17
Romy, H. ...................................26
Ronningstam, E. .................12, 18
Ronningstam, E. F. ...................30
Rosowsky, E. ............................11
Ross, C. .....................................40
Rossi, G. ...................................11
Ros, T. .......................................24
Ruf, M. ................................24, 32
Ruggiero, G. M. ........................41
Ruiz, E. .....................................40
S
Saadi, S. ....................................37
Sabass, L. ...........................17, 23
Saggino, A. ...............................36
Saito, T. ....................................35
Salamin, V. ...............................25
Salazar, J. ..................................38
Salvador, A. ..............................35
Salvador-Carulla, L. ............30, 38
Salvatore, G. .............................28
Samory, G. ................................12
Sanatinia, R. .............................11
Sanchez, C. L. ...........................17
Sanchez-Mora, C. .....................38
Sandell, A. ................................17
Sander Hansen, J. .....................35
Sandomirsky, M. .......................37
Santangelo, P. .............................9
Sanza, M. ............................12, 13
Saponaro, A. .......................12, 13
Sarubin, N. ...............................23
Sasaroli, S. ................................41
Sasdelli, A. ..........................38, 41
Scalabrini, A. ......................16, 36
Scazzero, M. .............................16
Schafer, I. .................................21
Schauenburg, H. ....22, 34, 35, 38
Scheibner, H. ............................36
Scherpiet, S. .............................24
Schlosser, N. ............................28
Schloss, N. ................................14
Schluter, C. .................................9
Schmahl, C. .................10, 11, 13,
...................14, 19, 20, 24, 26, 28,
....................30, 31, 32, 34, 36, 41
Schmeck, K. ........................15, 22
Schmitt, R. ................................26
Schneider, M. ...........................24
Schriner, F. .........................27, 31
Schroeder, K. ............................21
Schulz, S. C. .............................17
Schumitz, M. ............................14
Schuppert, M. ...........................10
Schuster, P. ...............................25
Sebastian, A. .......................24, 27
Segade, A. ................................37
Seifritz, E. .................................24
Selby, E. A. ...............................41
Semerari, A. ....................8, 20, 27
Semrov, E. ................................12
Sengupta, S. .............................40
Seok, J.-H. ................................35
Shabes, P. ...........................14, 41
Sharp, C. .................13, 19, 22, 31
Shaw, J. ..............................15, 16
Shaw, M. ..................................17
Shenar, R. .................................35
Shimasaki, A. ............................35
Siegle, G. ..................................31
Siever, L. J. ...............................40
Silk, K. ......................................11
Silvani, V. ..................................31
Simmons, J. ..............................26
Simonsen, E. ..........18, 30, 34, 40
Siniscalchi, R. ...........................34
Sinnaeve, R. ..............................28
Siugzdaite, R. ...........................36
Skodol, A. ...................................9
Slotema, C. ...............................13
Sobanski, E. ..................19, 27, 34
Soler, J. ...................27, 32, 38, 40
Soloff, P. ....................................32
Soltész-Várhelyi, K. ..................40
Somma, A. ................................34
Speranza, M. ......................23, 32
Spotti, R. ...................................31
Staempfli, P. ..............................24
Stankard, P. ........................34, 41
Statovci, S. ................................38
Steendam, M. ...........................12
Steil, R. ...............................26, 27
Steinert, T. ................................36
Stepp, S. .......................20, 25, 31
Steuwe, C. ................................28
Steyer, J. ...................................36
Stieltjes, B. ...............................26
Stiglmayr, C. ...............................9
Stippl, A. ...................................36
Stößel, G. ............................24, 32
Stoffers, J. .................................10
Stojsic, K. .................................35
Strunz, S. ..................................30
Suarez, C. ...........................25, 36
Suermann, K. ..............................9
Sulzer, J. ...................................24
Sulzer, S. ..................................39
Suttora, C. .................................11
Swales, M. ................................29
Vannuccini, V. ..........................31
van Rien, H. ..............................22
van Schie, C. .............................37
van Wel, B. ...............................23
Vater, A. ....................................30
Vecchi, S. ..................................37
Vega, D. ..............................32, 38
Velez-Pastrana, M. .............30, 41
Velotti, P. ............................36, 37
Veltman, J. H. Smit, Dick J .......26
Videler, A. .................................11
Vimercati, P. .......................38, 40
Vinestock, M. ...........................40
Visintini, R. ...................27, 36, 41
Völlm, B. ...................................10
von Boetticher, D. .....................37
von Dawans, B. .........................13
T
W
Taliouridis, K. ...............18, 23, 37
Tardon, M. ................................25
Taubner, S. ...............................25
Tedesco, P. ................................38
Testa, M. ...................................35
Thomaes, K. .............................26
Thome, J. ................24, 28, 32, 41
Thompson, K. ...........................10
Thylstrup, B. ...............................9
Timpano Sportiello, M. R. ........40
Tomko, R. .................................13
Tommasi, M. .............................36
Tonti, L. ....................................38
Torgersen, S. ............................25
Treede, R.-D. ................14, 19, 41
Trevisani, P. ..............................31
Tromp, N. ...........................15, 18
Trull, T. ...............9, 13, 14, 20, 23
Trull, T. J. ....................................9
Tüscher, O. .........................24, 27
Tull, M. .....................................10
Turner, B. .................................10
U
Ullisch, M. ................................34
Unoka, Z. ......................30, 37, 40
Urbani, A. .................................34
Urgo, M. G. ...............................41
Urnes, G. ..................................25
V
Vai, B. .......................................40
van Alphen, B. ..........................11
van Balkom, A. J. ......................26
van den Bosch, L. .....................28
van den Bulk, B. .......................37
van Dijk, R. .........................15, 18
van Eijk, J. ..............19, 24, 31, 34
van Hemert, A. .........................37
van Klaveren, B. .......................37
van Meekeren, E. ................12, 15
Walden, S. ................................28
Weidt, S. ...................................24
Weinberg, I. ..............................12
Wenzel, K. ..................................9
Westling, S. ..............................41
White, R. ...................................32
Whittle, S. .................................26
Wilberg, T. ................9, 13, 25, 28
Willemsen, E. ...........................37
Williams, R. ..............................23
Willis, F. ....................................19
Wilson, C. .................................17
Wingenfeld, K. ....................18, 24
Winter, D. .....................26, 28, 31
Wittmann, E. ...............................9
Wolf, O. T. ...........................18, 24
Wood, P. .....................................9
Wright, A. G. C. ........................13
Y
Yakeley, J. .................................17
Yang, A. ....................................30
Yeandle, J. ....................34, 38, 39
Yeoman, F. ..........................19, 30
Yucel, M. ...................................26
Yuen, H. P. ................................13
Z
Zanarini, M. ..................14, 17, 25
Zanichelli, A. ............................41
Zavattini, G. C. ..........................36
Zeitler, M.-L. .......................10, 36
Zepf, F. ................................17, 34
Zill, P. ..................................17, 23
Zimmer, J. .................................21
Zimmermann, J. .......9, 13, 23, 34
Zita, G. ......................................31
Zvyagintsev, M. ........................17
47
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