The Fate of Borderline Pathology in Dimensional Classification Systems: A Narrative Review
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Recent revisions of personality disorders (PD) classifications have moved from categorical diagnoses toward dimensional models, raising renewed questions about the nosological status and clinical utility of borderline personality disorder (BPD). This narrative review traces the development of the borderline construct from early descriptions of patients positioned between neurosis and psychosis, through its theoretical consolidation within the concept of borderline personality organization, to the operationalization of BPD in DSM III and subsequent diagnostic revisions. A central section summarizes contemporary controversies regarding the validity and utility of BPD features. Arguments for abandoning the diagnosis emphasize the absence of a distinct borderline factor in factor analytic studies, the tendency of the construct to capture fluctuating symptoms and patterns of behaviour rather than stable maladaptive personality traits, the stigmatizing and non selective use of the label, and the lack of disorder specific treatment approaches. In contrast, converging evidence supports the view that core borderline symptoms frequently function as markers of general PD pathology and of the severity of impairments in self and interpersonal functioning. The paper integrates the regional tradition of the borderline level of personality functioning, conceptualizing borderline pathology as a dynamic dimension of dysfunction with potential transient regressions, and links this concept to the Level of Personality Functioning (LPF, Criterion A) within the DSM 5 Alternative Model for Personality Disorders (AMPD). Retaining borderline pathology as a dimension may support contemporary PD assessment by offering a clinically recognizable marker of overall dysfunction, a guide for rating severity, an indicator of personality structure and need for psychotherapy, without disrupting continuity with an extensive clinical and research tradition.