Eur J Psychotraumatol. 2026 Dec;17(1):2646755. doi: 10.1080/20008066.2026.2646755. Epub 2026 Apr 22.
ABSTRACT
Background: The Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ) is a widely used tool for the retrospective assessment of childhood trauma (CT). However, evidence on its long-term stability remains limited, especially in diagnostically complex populations such as individuals with borderline personality disorder (BPD). Given the disorder’s characteristic emotional instability and altered self-perception, assessing the stability of CTQ scale scores in this group is particularly important.Methods: In a longitudinal design, CTQ and the Borderline Symptom List-23 (BSL-23) scores were collected at two timepoints (T0: n = 417; T1: n = 195) from individuals with current or past BPD. The interval between assessments ranged from 4-11 years (mean 7.72 years).Results: CTQ total scores showed excellent internal consistency (McDonald’s ω = .95) and high long-term stability (intraclass correlation coefficient = .82), regardless of assessment interval. Subscale stabilities ranged from moderate to high (Sexual Abuse = .86; Physical Abuse = .81; Emotional Neglect = .77; Physical Neglect = .76; Emotional Abuse = .75). Changes in CTQ subscale scores showed small to moderate positive associations with changes in BPD symptom severity (β = .23 -.33), indicating that increases in perceived childhood trauma were accompanied by increases in symptom severity, except for Physical Neglect (β = .16, p = .078).Conclusions: The CTQ scales demonstrated strong long-term stability over up to 11 years in a heterogeneous BPD sample. Individual changes in perceived childhood trauma were associated with corresponding changes in BPD symptom severity. These results support the CTQ’s utility as a retrospective measure of childhood trauma.
PMID:42018457 | DOI:10.1080/20008066.2026.2646755
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