Attention Research Update
June 2004
"Helping parents, professionals and educators
stay informed about new research on ADHD"
David
Rabiner, Ph.D. Senior Research
Scientist, Duke University
Note: Attention Research Update
receives support from pharmaceutical companies who manufacture
stimulant medication to treat ADHD. Although I do not believe
this has influenced the objectivity of the research summary reported
below, I want you to be aware of this relationship.
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The Multimodal Treatment Study of ADHD (MTA Study)
is the largest ADHD treatment study ever conducted.
A total of 597 children with ADHD-Combined Type (i.e., they had
both inattentive and hyperactive-impulsive symptoms) were randomly
assigned to 1 of 4 treatments: medication management, behavior
modification, medication management + behavior modification (i.e.,
combined treatment), or community care (CC). Medication
treatment and behavior therapy were selected because they had the most
extensive evidence-base to support their efficacy, and alternative
and/or less well-established ADHD treatments were not investigated.
The medication and behavioral treatment
provided in the MTA study were far more rigorous than what children
typically receive in community settings. Medication
treatment began with an extensive double-blind trial to determine the
optimum dose and medication for each child, and the ongoing
effectiveness of children's treatment was carefully monitored so that
adjustments could be made when necessary. The
behavioral intervention included over 25 parent training sessions, an
intensive summer camp treatment program, and extensive support provided
by paraprofessionals in children's classrooms. In
contrast, children in the community care condition (CC) received
whatever treatments parents opted to pursue for their child in the
community. Although this included
medication treatment for the majority of children, it appeared that
this treatment was not conducted with the same rigor as with children
who received medication treatment from the MTA researchers.
The initial results from this landmark study
examined children's outcomes 14 months after treatment began. Although results from this complex study do
not lend themselves to a brief summary, the overall pattern suggested
that children who received intensive medication management - either
alone or in combination with behavior treatment - had more positive
outcomes than children who receive behavior therapy alone or community
care. Although this was not true for all
the different outcome measures considered (e.g., ADHD symptoms,
parent-child relations, oppositional behavior, reading, social skills,
etc.) it was the case for primary ADHD symptoms as well as for a
composite outcome measure that included measures from a broad array of
different domains. There was also modest
evidence that children who received combined treatment were doing
better overall than children who received medication treatment alone.
In terms of the percentage of children within each
group who were no longer showing clinically elevated levels of ADHD
symptoms and symptoms of oppositional defiant disorder, results
indicated that 68% of the combined group, 56% of the medication only
group, 33% of the behavior therapy group, and only 25% of the community
care group had levels of these symptoms that fell in the normal range. These figures highlight that intensive
medication treatment was more likely to result in a normalized level of
core ADHD and ODD symptoms than either behavior therapy or community
care, and that combined treatment was associated with the highest rate
of "normalization". For a more complete description of MTA treatments
and the initially reported outcome results, please visit www.helpforadd.com/mtastudy.htm.
As noted above, the results previously reported
for the MTA Study cover the period out to 14 months after children's
treatment began. An important, but as yet
unanswered question, is the extent to which treatment benefits
persisted after children were no longer receiving the intensive
treatments provided in the study. For
example, did the benefits associated with carefully conducted
medication treatment persist once children's treatment was no longer
being monitored through the study? And,
was there persistent evidence that the combination of careful
medication treatment and intensive behavior therapy was superior
overall to medication treatment alone?
The persistent effects of MTA treatments were
examined in a study published recently in Pediatrics (MTA Cooperative
Group, 2004. National Institute of Mental Health Multimodal Treatment
Study of ADHD: 24-Month Outcomes of Treatment Strategies for ADHD, 113,
754-760.). In this report, the MTA
researchers examined how children were faring 10 months after all
study-related treatments had ended. During
these 10 months, children were no longer receiving any treatment
services from the researchers; instead, they received whatever
interventions their parents selected for them from providers in their
community.
Thus, children who had received medication
treatment through the study may or may not have continued on medication. And, if their parents chose to continue
medication treatment, they were no longer carefully monitored by MTA
researchers so that treatment adjustments could be made when indicated. Similarly, children who received intensive
behavior therapy were no longer be receiving such treatment through the
study. Parents of these children could
thus continue with behavioral intervention in whatever way they were
able to. Or, they may have opted to begin
treating their child with medication.
RESULTS
In general, results from the 24-month outcome
analyses were similar to those found at 14 months.
For core symptoms of ADHD and ODD, children who had received
intensive medication treatment - either alone or in combination with
behavior therapy - had superior outcomes to those who received
intensive behavior therapy only or community care. Some, but not all of
the persistent benefit of having received intensive medication
treatment depended on whether children received medication for some
portion of the 10-month interval since study treatment services had
ended.
Compared to the magnitude of the differences that
were evident at 14 months the superior outcomes for children who had
received medication treatment from the researchers was reduced by about
50%. Children who had received combined
treatment were not doing significantly better than those who received
intensive medication treatment alone. And,
those who received intensive behavioral treatment were not doing better
than children who had received routine community care.
In order to better understand the clinical
significance of these findings, the researchers examined the percentage
of children in each group who had levels of ADHD and ODD symptoms at 24
months that fell within the normal range. These
percentages were 48%, 37%, 32%, and 28% for the combined, medication
only, behavior therapy, and community care groups respectively. Thus, as was found at the 14-month outcome
assessment, normalization rates of ADHD and ODD symptoms was highest
among children whose treatment included the intensive MTA medication
component. It is noteworthy, however, that
while the percentages of children with normalized symptom levels were
essentially unchanged for the behavior therapy and community care
groups, they had declined substantially for the combined (i.e., from
68% to 47%) and medication only (i.e., from 56% to 37%) groups.
For the other domains examined - social skills,
reading achievement, and parents use of negative/ineffective discipline
strategies there was no evidence of significant treatment group
differences in 24-month outcomes. In the
social skills domain, however, children who received combined treatment
tended to be doing better than children who received intensive
medication treatment alone. Similar
results were found for parents' use of negative/ineffective discipline. Thus, there continued to be some indication
that combined treatment may have been more effective in some domains
that medication management only.
As a final analysis, the researchers examined the
use of medication treatment for children in each group at the 24-month
outcome period. Seventy percent of
children in the combined group and 72% of children in the medication
only group were still taking medication. In
contrast, 38% of children in the behavior therapy group had been
started on medication and 62% of children who received community care
were on medication. The doses being
received by children who had received medication treatment from MTA
researchers were higher than for other children.
Results from this study indicate the persistent
superiority of the intensive MTA medication treatment for ADHD and ODD
symptoms, even after families were left to pursue whatever treatments
they preferred and the intensive study-related treatments were replaced
with care provided by community physicians. Although
these persistent benefits are encouraging, it must be noted that they
were less robust than they had been at the 14-month outcome assessment. In addition, there was no evidence that
intensive medication treatment was associated with better 24-month
outcomes in the other domains examined. Overall,
therefore, it appears that the persistent benefits associated with
carefully conducted medication treatment were relatively modest.
One likely reason for the dimunition in benefits
associated with MTA medication treatment is that a number of children
ended medication treatment completely after study-delivered services
ended. In addition, it is unlikely that
children who continued on medication received the same level of
treatment monitoring as had been provided by MTA physicians. Had this careful monitoring of ongoing
medication treatment effectiveness continued, it is possible that these
children would have continued to do ever better than was found to be
the case.
Although children who had received intensive
behavior therapy alone were not faring quite as well, a substantial
percentage, i.e., 32%, continued to show normalized levels of ADHD and
ODD symptoms. Thus, this is additional
evidence for the utility of behavior therapy for ADHD.
It should be noted, however, that many parents whose child had
received behavior therapy chose to begin medication treatment for their
child.
In conclusion, results from this study indicate
that the benefits of high quality medication treatment persist to some
extent even when this treatment is no longer being provided. Although the persistent benefits were modest
at best, the MTA authors note that even these modest effects may have
important public health benefits. The
results also suggest that even intensive multimodal treatment conducted
over an extended period does not eliminate the adverse impact of ADHD
for most children, and that high quality treatment services provided
over many years is likely to be required to help most children reach
their full potential.
Finally, these results highlight the pressing need
to develop new interventions for ADHD whose efficacy is established
through carefully conducted research. Even
when provided in the most rigorous way possible, medication and
behavior therapy were not successful in normalizing levels of ADHD and
ODD symptoms for a large percentage of children. Thus,
it seems very important for researchers to focus attention on
developing alternative ADHD interventions, and perhaps to strategies
for preventing the development of ADHD in the first place.
Thanks again to Cogmed
and Shire US Inc. for
supporting this issue of Attention Research
Update
(c) 2004 David Rabiner, Ph.D.
Information presented in Attention Research Update is for informational
purposes only, and is not a substitute for professional medical
advice. Although newsletter sponsors offer products and services
that I believe will be of interest to subscribers, sponsorship of
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