| Literature DB >> 23216993 |
Zoe Huntley1, Stefanos Maltezos, Charlotte Williams, Alun Morinan, Amy Hammon, David Ball, E Jane Marshall, Francis Keaney, Susan Young, Patrik Bolton, Karen Glaser, Raoul Howe-Forbes, Jonna Kuntsi, Kiriakos Xenitidis, Declan Murphy, Philip J Asherson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: ADHD is a common childhood onset mental health disorder that persists into adulthood in two-thirds of cases. One of the most prevalent and impairing comorbidities of ADHD in adults are substance use disorders. We estimate rates of ADHD in patients with substance abuse disorders and delineate impairment in the co-morbid group.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23216993 PMCID: PMC3537519 DOI: 10.1186/1471-244X-12-223
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Sample characteristics
| Male gender | 173 (76.5%) |
| Mean age* | 39.0 (SD 10.3) |
| Ethnicity* | 183 (81.0%) White European |
| Alcohol dependence* | 112 (49.6%) |
| Drug dependence* | 29 (12.8%) |
| Alcohol and drug dependence* | 85 (37.6%) |
Inter-rater reliability for individual items on the diagnostic interview for ADHD in adults (DIVA)
| Reliability | Overall | 0.875 | 98% | 95% |
| | Child | 0.900 | 95% | 100% |
| Adult | 0.850 | 100% | 90% |
Intra-class correlations (r) for total symptom scores and concordance rates (CR) for diagnostic thresholds.
Figure 1Flow of participants through screening stages.
Mean (SD) ADHD screening scores for retrospective ratings from childhood and current symptoms at T1 and T2 in the total inpatient sample
| Total score /54 | 21.09 | 23.03 | 14.65 | −8.6 | 11.92** |
| (SD 15.0) | (SD 12.5) | (SD 12.1) | (SD 9.1) | | |
| Inattentive symptoms /9 | 3.51 | 3.59 | 1.83 | −1.80 | 10.21** |
| (SD 3.2) | (SD 2.9) | (SD 2.5) | (SD 2.2) | | |
| Hyp/imp symptoms /9 | 3.29 | 3.46 | 2.30 | −1.23 | 7.40** |
| (SD 3.0) | (SD 2.6) | (SD 2.6) | (SD 2.1) |
There is a significant reduction in ADHD symptoms following 1-week or more of treatment in the addiction units.
** Significant at p<0.001.
Figure 2Estimated prevalence of ADHD.
Correlations between self and informant reports
| | | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Current behaviour informant report | .372** | .375* | |
| | .617* | .654* | |
| | .258 | .169 | |
| | | Childhood screener | |
| Childhood behaviour informant report | .391** | | |
| | .231 | | |
| .293 | |||
** Significant at p<0.01 / *Significant at p<0.05.
Figure 3Mean impairment scores at T1 (/3) (inpatient sample).
Drug use (past or current) in ADHD vs. non-ADHD groups
| ADHD (n=11) | 45.5% | 63.7% | 18.2% | 54.6% | 36.4% |
| Non-ADHD (n=182) | 29.7% | 6.6% | 29.1% | 11.0% | 15.4% |
| Likelihood Ratio | 1.141 | 21.289 | .663 | 11.361 | 2.685 |
| p value | .285 | <0.001** | .416 | .001** | .101 |
** Significant at p<0.01.
Other indicators of impairment in ADHD vs. non-ADHD groups
| ADHD (n=11) | 54.5% | 27.3% |
| Non-ADHD (n=183) | 23.0% | 35.0% |
| Likelihood Ratio | 4.675 | 5.714 |
| p value | .029* | .057 |
*Significant at p<0.05.