| Literature DB >> 26762184 |
Guillermo Perez Algorta1, Alyson Lamont Dodd2, Argyris Stringaris3, Eric A Youngstrom4.
Abstract
Early, accurate identification of ADHD would improve outcomes while avoiding unnecessary medication exposure for non-ADHD youths, but is challenging, especially in primary care. The aim of this paper is to test the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) using a nationally representative sample to develop scoring weights for clinical use. The British Child and Adolescent Mental Health Survey (N = 18,232 youths 5-15 years old) included semi-structured interview DSM-IV diagnoses and parent-rated SDQ scores. Areas under the curve for SDQ subscales were good (0.81) to excellent (0.96) across sex and age groups. Hyperactivity/inattention scale scores of 10+ increased odds of ADHD by 21.3×. For discriminating ADHD from other diagnoses, accuracy was fair (<0.70) to good (0.88); Hyperactivity/inattention scale scores of 10+ increased odds of ADHD by 4.47×. The SDQ is free, easy to score, and provides clinically meaningful changes in odds of ADHD that can guide clinical decision-making in an evidence-based medicine framework.Entities:
Keywords: ADHD; AUC; Evidence-based assessment; Screening
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26762184 PMCID: PMC4990620 DOI: 10.1007/s00787-015-0815-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry ISSN: 1018-8827 Impact factor: 4.785
Summary of past studies reporting area under the curve for SDQ hyperactive/inattentive subscale
| Study citation | N/ADHD | Gender (% male) | Age | Source population (com, clin) | Country | AUC | 95 % CI | SE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 27/59a
| 55 | 5–12 | Clin | Yemen | 0.86 | 0.78–0.95 | – |
| [ | 370/173c | 73 | 5–17 | Clin | Germany | 0.77 |
| – |
| [ | 240/283d | 65 | 3–17 | Clin | Spain | 0.86 | 0.82–0.89 | – |
| [ | 47/47e | – | – | Clin/com | Shanghai/ | 0.77 | 0.71–0.83 | – |
| [ | 110/65f
| – | 4–16 | Com/clin | Germany | 0.94 | – | 0.02 |
| [ | 162/11c
| – | 4–16 | Com/clin | Bangladesh | 0.92 | – | 0.03 |
| [ | 5997/236 | 50 | 7–9 | Com | Norway | 0.91 | 0.90–0.92 | – |
Com community sample, Clin clinical sample, AUC area under the curve, SE standard error
aConduct and Hyperactivity were collapsed in a single group using DAWBA diagnoses
bThe discriminant power of the SDQ H/I scale was judged by comparing all community subjects with those children who had been diagnosed by the DAWBA as having a conduct and hyperactivity disorder
cFormal diagnosis was determined by clinical diagnosis only
dADHD rating scale-IV was used as a gold standard
eSamples matched by age and gender
fComparisons were made between community sample vs. ADHD, excluding other diagnosis from comparison group
gOnly p value is provided
Demographic and clinical information
| Non-ADHD ( | ADHD combined ( | ADHD inattentive ( | ADHD hyperactivity ( | Statistic | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, | 10.16 ± 3.27 | 10.02 ± 3.09 | 10.07 ± 2.81 | 9.32 ± 2.92 | 1.95 |
| Gender, male [ | 8987 (50) | 224 (85) | 83 (76) | 29 (85) | 170.8*** |
| Race, white [ | 16062 (89) | 255 (97) | 103 (94) | 29 (85) | 17.46** |
| Life events, 3 or more [yes (%)] | 2267 (13) | 75 (29) | 28 (26) | 11 (32) | 82.09*** |
| General health, bad [ | 1133 (6) | 46 (17) | 14 (13) | 4 (12) | 59.93*** |
| Neurodevelopmental problem [yes, | 526 (3) | 46 (17) | 23 (21) | 3 (9) | 285.15*** |
| Mother edu qualification, none [yes (%)] | 3688 (21) | 90 (35) | 22 (20) | 8 (24) | 29.80*** |
| Parent working status, no working [yes (%)] | 2991 (17) | 89 (34) | 27 (25) | 10 (29) | 61.94*** |
| Family size, 3 or more children [yes, | 6324 (35) | 87 (33) | 48 (44) | 15 (44) | 5.24 |
| Single parent family [yes, | 4126 (23) | 104 (40) | 36 (33) | 9 (27) | 46.01*** |
| Family functioning score, | 1.69 ± .41a | 1.92 ± 0.49 | 1.80 ± 0.48 | 1.90 ± 0.46 | 31.91*** |
| Parent GHQ score, | 1.70 ± 2.70a | 3.12 ± 3.32 | 2.96 ± 3.51 | 2.97 ± 3.12 | 33.35*** |
*** p would be significant even after stringent Bonferroni correction
aNon-ADHD significantly different than ADHD groups
SDQ AUC for whole sample (a) and SDQ AUC restricted to those with a positive psychiatric diagnosis–sensitivity analyses (b)
| AUC [95 % CI] | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| SDQ scales parent version | Age < 10 | 11–13 | 14–16 |
| (a) | |||
| Male any ADHD/non-ADHD, | 184/4725 | 96/2417 | 55/1762 |
| Hyperactivity/inattention | 0.92 [0.91–0.94]a,b | 0.92 [0.91–0.94]a | 0.91 [0.89–0.94] |
| Conduct problems | 0.81 [0.77–0.84]c | 0.85 [0.81–0.89]c | 0.88 [0.83–0.92] |
| Total difficulties | 0.90 [0.89–0.92] | 0.92 [0.90–0.94] | 0.91 [0.88–0.94] |
| Female any ADHD/non-ADHD, | 39/4827 | 21/2317 | 12/1769 |
| Hyperactivity/inattention | 0.92 [0.88–0.97]a,d | 0.93 [0.87–0.99]a | 0.96 [0.94–0.99]a |
| Conduct problems | 0.82 [0.75–0.90]c | 0.83 [0.73–0.93]c | 0.86 [0.77–0.95]c |
| Total difficulties | 0.93 [0.91–0.95] | 0.92 [0.85–0.98] | 0.94 [0.89–0.99] |
Venkatraman’s test for two paired ROC curves (n bootstrap replications = 2000). Superscript letters represent pairwise significantly different ROC comparisons (p < 0.05). Note that Venkatraman’s test compares the entire curves, so it can detect overall differences in performance even when confidence intervals for point estimates overlap
¥Significant (p < 0.05) Venkatraman’s test for two unpaired ROC curves (H/I subscale male vs. female)
aH/I > CD
bH/I > TD
cCP < TD
dH/I < TD
Diagnostic likelihood ratio of the SDQ I/H subscale
| Hyperactivity/inattention scale score range | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full sample, Any ADHD prevalence (2 %) | ||||
| 0–4 | 5–9 | 10 | ||
| Diagnostic likelihood ratio | 0.03 | 2.34 | 21.32 | |
| Subsample with + diagnostic, any ADHD prevalence (23 %) | ||||
| 0–4 | 5–7 | 8–9 | 10 | |
| Diagnostic likelihood ratio | 0.06 | 0.77 | 1.80 | 4.47 |
Fig. 1Probability Nomogram using SDQ I/H subscale. Instructions to use a nomogram: Step 1 indicates the pretest probability or estimated prevalence of a particular condition (23 % of any ADHD in this example). Step 2 in the middle axis, carries information about the associated diagnostic likelihood ratio with a particular cut score (based on Table 4, a DLR of 4.47 is associated with a score of 10). Finally, Step 3 reflects the estimate post-test probability of having any ADHD diagnosis. If a different youth obtains a different score in the SDQ I/H subscale, for example a score of 8, the only correction needed to previous steps is the identification of the appropriate DLR in Table 4. Next, trace a new line starting at the same point (identical estimated prevalence), crossing the appropriate DLR as a Step 2, and reading the new estimated post-test probability in the last axis (see thin arrow)