The DSM-5 defines two personality disorder diagnoses, namely Other specified personality disorder and Unspecified personality disorder, along with Personality change due to another medical condition under Other personality disorders.[1] The ICD-10 also contains similar categories, namely, Other specific personality disorder and Personality disorder, unspecified.
Personality disorder not otherwise specified (PD-NOS) was a subclinical[a] diagnostic classification for some DSM-IVAxis IIpersonality disorders not listed in DSM-IV.[3] The DSM-5 transitioned from NOS diagnoses to other specified and unspecified in order to "enhance diagnostic specificity".[4] The diagnoses in the DSM-5 are not direct equivalents to PD-NOS.
The ICD-10 defines the diagnosis Other specific personality disorder (F60.8) for personality disorders that don't have a separate code. This diagnosis allows the following type specifiers: "eccentric", "haltlose", "immature", "narcissistic", "passive-aggressive", and "psychoneurotic". The DSM-5 contains the similarly named diagnosis Other Specified Personality Disorder (301.89; F60.89), which is used when recording the presence of personality disorder along with the reasons for the condition not being classified as one of the specific personality disorders.[1]
Unspecified
The ICD-10 contains Personality disorder, unspecified (F60.9) for general personality disorder diagnoses. The DSM-5 diagnosis of Unspecified Personality Disorder (301.9; F60.9) is, according to the DSM-5, used when a patient presents with personality disorder symptoms that cause distress or impairment, but the clinician either chooses not to indicate the specific reason these criteria are not met for any one disorder, or there isn’t enough information available to make a more precise diagnosis.[1]
Not otherwise specified
This diagnosis was part of the DSM-IV-TR, and could be assigned when no other personality disorder in the DSM fit the patient's symptoms.[5] This diagnosis is not included in subsequent (DSM-5 and DSM-5-TR) editions of the DSM. The DSM-IV-TR excluded four personality disorders, but this diagnosis may be used instead. The four excluded personality disorders are:
This section needs expansionwith: This section should contain epidemiology of other diagnoses than just PD-NOS, efter the scope of the article was expanded. You can help by adding missing information. (April 2025)
A 2004 meta-analysis estimated the prevalence of PD-NOS in patient samples between 8-13%. In structured interview studies it is the third most common diagnosis given, in unstructured studies it is the single most frequent diagnosis. Half the studies did not give further definition for the diagnosis, and those that did used "mixed" most often.[8]
In another study, out of 1760 psychotherapy referrals, 21.6% was diagnosed exclusively with PD-NOS. In terms of severity, patients with PD-NOS fell between a formal personality disorder diagnosis and no personality disorder. Patients who received PD-NOS as an additional diagnosis to their formal personality disorder diagnosis had the most severe problems.[9]
↑"Subclinical" in the sense that the person does not meet the diagnostic criteria for any specific personality disorder, but does meet the general criteria for a personality disorder diagnosis.
References
123Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders: DSM-5 (5thed.). Washington: American psychiatric association. 2013. pp.682–684. ISBN978-0-89042-554-1.
↑"Alternative DSM-5 Model for Personality Disorders". Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Disorders (fifthed.). Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Association. p.761.
↑Verheul R, Bartak A, Widiger T (Aug 2007). "Prevalence and construct validity of Personality Disorder Not Otherwise Specified (PDNOS)". Journal of Personality Disorders. 21 (4): 359–370. doi:10.1521/pedi.2007.21.4.359. PMID17685833.