Borderline personality disorder is a complex psychiatric condition with limited and often ineffective treatment options, high variability in patient response, and frequent dropout from therapy. This review considers the potential of MDMA-assisted psychotherapy (MDMA-AP) as a new or complementary treatment. Based on MDMA-AP's promise in treating overlapping disorders like posttraumatic stress disorder, the authors propose initial treatment targets and hypothesized mechanisms of change grounded in prior literature and theory. They also outline considerations for designing clinical trials to investigate the safety, feasibility, and preliminary effects of MDMA-AP for borderline personality disorder.
Psychedelic therapy may hold potential for treating personality disorders by promoting adaptive changes in personality, though rigorous research is lacking. This review first examines research on psychedelics in individuals with personality disorders using the DSM-5-TR categorical model, then applies the dimensional DSM-AMPD framework to explore how psychedelics might affect self-functioning, interpersonal functioning, and pathological personality traits. The authors discuss clinical relevance, safety considerations, gaps, and recommendations for treating these complex populations.