Despite the availability of structured treatments for personality disorders (PDs), still 1 in 4 patients drop out of treatment. Knowledge of whether maladaptive personality traits can lead to dropout in psychotherapeutic treatment programs of PDs is important for the purpose of a suitable indication for such treatments, especially in the light of the new alternative model of personality disorders (AMPD), which is used more and more in clinical practice. The current study investigated whether pathological personality traits of the alternative model of personality disorders, as operationalized with the Personality Inventory for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (PID-5), and dimensional scores of PDs on the Personality Diagnostic Questionnaire-4ϩ, could serve as predictors for dropout in an intensive (day)clinical setting for the treatment of mainly Cluster C and mild Cluster B PDs. The main finding of this study was that high scores on the PID-5 trait scales Perceptual Dysregulation, Unusual Belief and Experiences, Suspiciousness, and Rigid Perfectionism, and low scores on Restricted Affectivity and the Personality Diagnostic Questionnaire-4ϩ avoidant PD dimensional score, were significantly predictive for dropout from treatment.
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