MedPath

ADHD Medication and Predictors of Treatment Outcome

Completed
Conditions
Attention Deficit Disorder With Hyperactivity (ADHD)
Interventions
Registration Number
NCT02136147
Lead Sponsor
Karolinska Institutet
Brief Summary

ADHD medication of children and adolescents is becoming increasingly common. Clinical experience and scientific studies have proven that approximately 30% of children/adolescents with ADHD do not benefit from this treatment. However, there is insufficient knowledge about who these children are. All children and adolescents, who start treatment with ADHD medication at public Child and Adolescent Psychiatry units in Stockholm, on Gotland, an in Västerbotten, will be asked to participate in the study. The investigators intend to monitor the patients´clinical symptoms and possible side-effects after treatment start. The investigators will collect background information and saliva samples from the patient and his/her parents to be able to study if there are any genetic (hereditary) or other markers that can predict positive or negative outcomes of the ADHD medication. With this information, the investigators aim at, to a greater extent, be able to individualize treatment choices for children and adolescents with ADHD without unnecessary, costly and possibly unfavorable treatment attempts.

Detailed Description

The specific aims for the ADAPT study are:

1. Investigate if certain gene polymorphisms are associated with poor effect of ADHD drugs (non-responders).

2. Investigate if other biologically, phenotypic or psychosocial factors are associated with poor effect of ADHD drugs (non-responders).

3. Investigate if the frequency of side-effects of ADHD drugs differs between children with different genotypes.

4. Investigate if the frequency of side-effects of ADHD drugs differs between children with different phenotypic and/or psychosocial factors

Method:

This study has a naturalistic design. The aim is to map all new treatments with ADHD drugs at all 13 public BUP units in Stockholm County, one BUP unit on Gotland, and three BUP units in Västerbotten Region. The participation means that medication is initiated as planned in normal clinical practice by the child´s ordinary physician, and beyond this only means a somewhat denser and more structured follow-up. In addition, the investigators will ask for saliva samples from the patient and his/her parents. The investigators aim at including at least 1000 individuals in total in the study.

Part of the data will be collected via the national Quality Register for ADHD Treatment Follow-up (BUSA), which has approved security procedures approved by the Swedish Data Inspection Board.

Case report forms are computerized and separate from the database registry for collected study data. The database and detailed variable lists are constructed in collaboration with professional database managers.

Standard Operation Procedures are designed in collaboration by project coordinator, study nurse and principal investigator, and may be revised after pilot phase.

Collected samples will be stored at KI biobank.

Data analysis:

1. To judge if the patient is a responder to ADHD drugs the SNAP-IV rating of ADHD symptoms (before and after medication start) is used. The patients who at 3 months have an at least 40% reduction in SNAP-IV score are reckoned "responders" and those who at the same time point have a less than 20% change in SNAP-IV score are reckoned "non-responders". Differences between the groups will be analyzed with logistic regression, with responder status as depending variable, and genotype and the other risk markers (biological, phenotypic, and psychosocial markers) as independent variables after correction for symptoms at baseline. Even a 50% drop-out rate will (i.e. 1000 out of estimated 2000 eligible individuals) give a 98% power to identify a 49% increase in non-responder proportion for a specific genotype.

2. Concomitantly, the outcome in side-effects, heart rate, blood pressure, weight (z-score) and length (z-score) will be analyzed with linear regression with the same independent variables.

3. The analyses are performed separately for each ADHD drug.

4. There are significantly more boys than girls (about 4:1) with ADHD. Given the sex difference in prevalence it is obvious to also include sex as a covariate in our analyses of treatment outcome.

5. Missing data will be treated according to the principles of complete case and multiple imputation.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
632
Inclusion Criteria
  • Clinical diagnosis of ADHD
  • Starting medication against ADHD symptoms with atomoxetine, methylphenidate, lisdexamphetamine, or guanfacine
Read More
Exclusion Criteria

Any medication against ADHD the last 3 months

Read More

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Children with ADHD medicationguanfacine medicationIdentified responders and non-responders in children/adolescents starting medication for treatment of ADHD in public child and adolescent psychiatric services in Stockholm, on Gotland, and in Västerbotten.
Guanfacine medicationguanfacine medicationIdentified responders and non-responders in children/adolescents starting medication with guanfacine in public child and adolescent psychiatric services in Stockholm and on Gotland.
Children with ADHD medicationmethylphenidate medicationIdentified responders and non-responders in children/adolescents starting medication for treatment of ADHD in public child and adolescent psychiatric services in Stockholm, on Gotland, and in Västerbotten.
Methylphenidate medicationmethylphenidate medicationIdentified responders and non-responders in children/adolescents starting medication with methylphenidate in public child and adolescent psychiatric services in Stockholm and on Gotland.
Children with ADHD medicationlisdexamphetamine medicationIdentified responders and non-responders in children/adolescents starting medication for treatment of ADHD in public child and adolescent psychiatric services in Stockholm, on Gotland, and in Västerbotten.
Children with ADHD medicationatomoxetine medicationIdentified responders and non-responders in children/adolescents starting medication for treatment of ADHD in public child and adolescent psychiatric services in Stockholm, on Gotland, and in Västerbotten.
Lisdexamphetamine medicationlisdexamphetamine medicationIdentified responders and non-responders in children/adolescents starting medication with lisdexamphetamine in public child and adolescent psychiatric services in Stockholm and on Gotland.
Atomoxetine medicationatomoxetine medicationIdentified responders and non-responders in children/adolescents starting medication with atomoxetine in public child and adolescent psychiatric services in Stockholm and on Gotland.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
change in P-SEC (Pediatric Side Effects Checklist)at 3 months follow-up

Side-effect measure

change in SNAP-IV Teacher and Parent rating scale (Swanson, Nolan and Pelham ADHD Rating Scale)at 3 months follow-up

ADHD symptoms

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
change in P-SEC (Pediatric Side Effects Checklist)at 12 months follow-up

side effect measure

change in SNAP-IV Teacher and Parent rating scaleat 12 months follow-up

ADHD symptoms

change in CGI-S (Clinical Global Impression- of Severity)at 12 months follow-up

disease severity

change in height z-scoreat 12 months follow-up
change in C-GAS (Children´s global assessment scale)at 12 months follow-up

global functioning measure

change in systolic blood pressureat 12 months follow-up
change in Spence Children's Anxiety Scale (SCAS)at 12 months follow-up

symptoms of anxiety

change in diastolic blood pressureat 12 months follow-up
change in weight z-scoreat 12 months follow-up
change in Autism Spectrum Screening Questionnaire (ASSQ) scoreat 12 months follow-up

symptoms of autism

change in heart rateat 12 months follow-up

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Division for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry in Stockholm

🇸🇪

Stockholm, Stockholm County, Sweden

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath