Both short-term dynamic psychotherapy and cognitive therapy show modest success with anxious-fearful personality disorders. About 25% of patients receiving each treatment had improved symptoms and interpersonal relations at the end of 40 sessions. At 2-year follow-up the rates had risen to 38%–54%. Core personality pathology improved minimally during treatment, but 2 years later improvement was evident in 35%–38% of the patients. This comparison by Svartberg et al. (p.
810) is one of the few controlled studies of psychotherapy for cluster C personality disorders, which include avoidant, obsessive-compulsive, dependent, and passive-aggressive personality disorders. The two treatments were tailored to personality disorders, and the differences between them in outcomes were minimal. The significant, ongoing improvement seen with either type may indicate that many patients made the therapeutic dialogue their own and used it successfully after termination.