Abstract
Introduction
Alcohol Use Disorders are frequently comorbid with personality disorders. However, the heterogeneity of the prevalence estimates is high, and most data come from high income countries. Our aim is to estimate the prevalence and association between alcohol use outcomes and the three DSM-5 clusters of personality disorders in a representative sample of the São Paulo Metropolitan Area.
Materials and methods
A representative household sample of 2,942 adults was interviewed using the WHO Composite International Diagnostic Interview and the International Personality Disorder Examination Screening Questionnaire. Lifetime PD diagnoses were multiply imputed, and AUD diagnoses were obtained using DSM-5 criteria. We conducted cross-tabulations and logistic regression to estimate the associations between AUDs and PDs.
Results and discussion
Our study did not find significant associations of PDs with heavy drinking patterns or mild AUD. Cluster B PD respondents tended to show the highest conditional prevalence estimates of most alcohol use patterns and AUD, including its severity subtypes. When alcohol outcomes were regressed on all PD Clusters simultaneously, with adjustment for sex and age, only cluster B was significantly associated with past-year alcohol use (OR 3.0), regular drinking (OR 3.2), and AUDs (OR 8.5), especially moderate and severe cases of alcohol use disorders (OR 9.7 and 16.6, respectively). These associations between Cluster B PDs and these alcohol outcomes were shown to be independent of other PD Clusters and individuals´ sex and age.
Conclusion
The main finding of our study is that AUDs are highly comorbid with PDs. The presence of Cluster B PDs significantly increases the odds of alcohol consumption and disorders and of more severe forms of AUDs. Considering the local context of poor treatment provision, more specific prevention and intervention strategies should be directed to this population.
Funder
State of Sao Paulo Research Foundation, Brazil
Foundation for Science and Technology of Vitoria, Espirito Santo, Brazil
Secretaria de Seguranca Publica of the State of Sao Paulo, Brazil
United States National Institutes of Mental Health
John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
Pfizer Foundation
US Public Health Service
Fogarty International Center
Pan American Health Organization
Eli Lilly and Company Foundation
Ortho-McNeil Pharmaceutical, Inc.
GlaxoSmithKline
Bristol- Myers Squibb
Shire
Academic Excellence (CAPES-PROEX), Ministry of Education, Brazil
Brazilian Council for Scientific and Technological Development
State of São Paulo Research Foundation
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Cited by
4 articles.
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