Literature DB >> 27703750

The challenges of implementing ADHD clinical guidelines and research best evidence in routine clinical care settings: Delphi survey and mixed-methods study.

Charlotte L Hall1, John A Taylor2, Karen Newell3, Laurence Baldwin4, Kapil Sayal5, Chris Hollis6.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The landmark US Multimodal Treatment of ADHD (MTA) study established the benefits of individualised medication titration and optimisation strategies to improve short- to medium-term outcomes in attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). This individualised medication management approach was subsequently incorporated into the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) ADHD Clinical Guidelines (NICE CG78). However, little is known about clinicians' attitudes towards implementing these medication management strategies for ADHD in routine care. AIMS: To examine National Health Service (NHS) healthcare professionals' consensus on ADHD medication management strategies.
METHOD: Using the Delphi method, we examined perceptions on the importance and feasibility of implementing 103 ADHD treatment statements from sources including the UK NICE ADHD guidelines and US medication management algorithms.
RESULTS: Certain recommendations for ADHD medication management were judged as important and feasible to implement, including a stepwise titration of stimulant medication. Other recommendations were perceived as important but not feasible to implement in routine practice, such as weekly clinic follow-up with the family during titration and collection of follow-up symptom questionnaires.
CONCLUSIONS: Many of the key guideline recommendations for ADHD medication management are viewed by clinicians as important and feasible to implement. However, some recommendations present significant implementation challenges within the context of routine NHS clinical care in England. DECLARATION OF INTEREST: C.H. and K.S. were members of the Guideline Development Group for the NICE ADHD Clinical Guideline (NICE CG78). COPYRIGHT AND USAGE:
© 2016 The Royal College of Psychiatrists. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Non-Commercial, No Derivatives (CC BY-NC-ND) licence.

Entities:  

Year:  2016        PMID: 27703750      PMCID: PMC4995556          DOI: 10.1192/bjpo.bp.115.002386

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BJPsych Open        ISSN: 2056-4724


Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a common neurodevelopmental disorder, which left untreated can have a significant impact on the lives of affected young people, their families and society.[1,2] In the UK, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) ADHD guidelines[3] provide the gold standard for the diagnosis and management of ADHD, advocating medication as the first-line treatment for severe or moderate ADHD. The landmark US Multimodal Treatment of ADHD (MTA) study[4] investigated the clinical effectiveness of a medication management strategy which involved a carefully monitored individualised titration period. This protocol resulted in significantly improved ADHD outcomes in the short to medium term.[5,6] The Texas Children's Medication Algorithm Project[7,8] was developed as a clinical tool to implement the MTA's medication protocol into routine clinical practice. Their findings indicated some deviance from the schedule, with a reluctance to titrate upwards and problems obtaining regular ratings from teachers and parents.[8] These findings indicate that despite the MTA medication protocol being considered by many as the US ‘gold standard’ in medication management, the Texas project found that some items were not feasible to implement in routine clinical practice. However, given cross-country differences in clinical practice, including differences in the delivery of ‘community care’ for ADHD and healthcare systems between the USA and UK, these findings may not translate to UK practice. Furthermore, since the MTA study which was conducted in the 1990s, prescribing practices have changed, with the introduction of long-acting ADHD medication. In the UK, there is evidence of variable implementation of NICE clinical guidelines in ‘real-world’ settings[9] and the specific implementation challenges of the NICE ADHD guideline have been highlighted.[10] More recently, audit data collected within the East Midlands region of the UK have demonstrated poor adherence to NICE guidelines, particularly with regard to measuring blood pressure/heart rate, formal recording of side-effects and the use of rating scales to aid assessment and management.[11] These findings indicate a gap between best practice guidelines and implementation of recommendations in ‘real-world’ practice that needs to be understood and addressed. Given the difficulties in implementing the Texas Algorithm (based on the MTA protocol) in the USA, variable implementation of NICE guidelines in general in the UK and the evidence of poor adherence to aspects of the NICE ADHD guideline, we decided to investigate how the MTA study-based practice parameters and NICE guideline recommendations are perceived by National Health Service (NHS) clinicians with respect to both importance and feasibly for implementation. We adopted a multi-method approach to determine UK stakeholder (parent/carer and NHS healthcare professional) perceptions of current and best practice clinical guideline recommendations for assessment and medical management of ADHD. Data were collected via an online survey, a parent/carer focus group and a healthcare professional's workshop. These findings were used to generate a set of statements on ADHD medication management which were then rated for importance and feasibility using a Delphi survey method.

Method

Delphi survey development

The items for the Delphi survey were developed through four different methodological approaches. Initially a scoping literature review was conducted. Eight healthcare databases were searched (Allied and Complementary Medicine Database (AMED), British Nursing Index, Embase, HMIC (Health Management Information Consortium), MEDLINE, PsycINFO, CINAHL and Health Business Elite) for papers published in English, using the keywords ADHD and medication prescribing/monitoring/guidelines/titration. Informal searching, including hand-searching of article references and web search engines (including Google and Google Scholar) was also undertaken. In addition, colleagues who have contact with patients with ADHD were also consulted with regard to further literature that might be available. On the basis of this literature search, NICE guidelines were shown as the most prominent and ‘gold-standard’ approach to inform medication monitoring of ADHD in the UK. The MTA and Texas Algorithm were shown to be one of the most cited and influential sources for ADHD practice parameters in the USA. Many of the MTA principles are incorporated within the NICE guideline recommendations. However, the Texas Algorithm provides more specific details on aspects of titration and optimisation than do NICE guideline recommendations and hence we include statements from both sources. The findings from the literature search were used to inform questions for an online survey aimed at establishing healthcare professionals’ perceptions of medication prescribing and monitoring.

Online survey

Eighty-five healthcare professionals responsible for the treatment of children and young people with ADHD across four participating NHS trusts (health provider organisations) within the regional Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care(CLAHRC) footprint were invited to participate in the online survey. Consent to participate was implied by survey participation. Responses were obtained from 26 healthcare professionals (response rate 31%), 12 of whom were community paediatricians (46%) and 14 child and adolescent psychiatrists (54%) working in NHS trusts across three English counties (Nottinghamshire (n=12), Derbyshire (n=9) and Lincolnshire (n=5)). One respondent was excluded from analysis because of low question completion within the survey (1% completion), resulting in a sample of 25 healthcare professionals. Although this response rate was relatively low, it is similar to that found in other online surveys aimed at healthcare professionals working in ADHD.[12] The survey investigated healthcare professionals’ current practice in diagnosis, initiation of medication, titration, assessment of response to medication and maintenance, which were based on strategies derived from NICE guidelines, the MTA group and the Texas Children's Medication Algorithm Project. The online survey questions and semi-structured focus groups were devised by drawing on the current literature and consultation within the study group, which included three consultant psychiatrists, one child and adolescent mental health nurse and two researchers with expertise in qualitative methods. Each member reviewed the questions to ascertain their appropriateness to the research question.

Parent/carer focus group

To assess parents/caregivers’ perceptions of medication management for children with ADHD, nine parents/carers of children currently receiving medication for ADHD attended a focus group, having read an information sheet and provided written consent prior to their participation. The focus group was semi-structured and consisted of 12 questions pertaining to the families’ experiences of starting medication, how and when they were monitored, how information was fed back to them, the effect of the medication and their perceptions of the utility and feasibility of changes to medication management. Audio recordings from the focus group were anonymised, transcribed verbatim and thematically analysed in accordance with the guidelines of Braun & Clarke.[13] Themes were derived inductively and verified via interrater reliability measures. The researchers utilised an essentiality/realist paradigm[13] that sought to understand medication management through the words of the participants, as opposed to the researchers’ co-created meaning.

Healthcare professionals’ workshop

To further elucidate healthcare professionals’ views of medication, a workshop was conducted with 22 healthcare professionals. The sample comprised 11 consultant child and adolescent psychiatrists, 4 nurses/nurse specialists, 5 community paediatricians and 2 NHS managers. Consent to participate was implied by attendance. From this sample, five groups were created to discuss different issues which concernedthe decision to medicate and choice of drug, titration, medication maintenance, rating scales/outcomes, treatment adherence and engagement with the aim of identifying current and best practice. Verbal feedback from the healthcare professionals’ discussions were collated via written notes and summarised.

Delphi study

The Delphi method is an interactive method utilising an expert panel answering questions in two or more rounds to achieve consensus. Participants are given feedback on question responses after each round; the process terminates once a predefined stopping point is reached.[14,15] In this study, the aim of the Delphi process was to determine expert consensus on medication management strategies. The combination of multiple methodologies used to inform the Delphi survey ensured that items were comprehensive and relevant to aspects of medication management identified as relevant by multiple stakeholders.

Expert panel

The expert panel comprised 12 healthcare professionals working within the four participating NHS trusts: 7 child and adolescent psychiatrists, 3 consultant community paediatricians and 2 ADHD nurse prescribers, all experienced in the assessment and treatment of ADHD. Consent to participate was implied by acceptance of the invitation to form part of the expert group.

Procedure

Healthcare professionals were invited by email to become a member of the expert group. Statements for the Delphi study were drawn from the findings of the online survey, the parent/carer focus group, the healthcare professional workshop, the NICE guidelines,[3] the MTA Cooperative Group[4,16] and the Texas Children's Medication Algorithm Project.[7,8] Some additional statements were added by the study team to determine clinical opinion on treatment choices or less directive recommendations. For example, reasons to choose atomoxetine and titration doses should be increased as required up to British National Formulary (BNF) limits (see Table 1 for statement source). The final Delphi questionnaire comprised 103 statements, 92 of which were to be rated on both their importance and feasibility. A subset of statements (n=11) pertaining to clinician choice/preference and where issues of feasibility were not applicable were rated on importance alone. A 9-point Likert scale was used as a response option for each statement, with scores 7–9 denoting the statement is ‘important’ and/or ‘feasible’ and 1–3 denoting the statement is ‘unimportant’ and/or ‘unfeasible’.
Table 1

Category 1 Delphi statements (n=24) reaching consensus on both importance and feasibility

Delphi statement numberCategory 1 statementsImportance median scoreFeasibility median scoreSource: NICESource: MTA/TexasSource: stakeholderSource: study team
1Baseline assessment of ADHD should include a description of impairment (severe/mild-moderate).98
5Baseline assessment should routinely document comorbid conditions99
6Drug treatment should be offered to all children with severe ADHD98.5
43A physical examination, including recording of pulse, blood pressure, height and weight should occur before starting medication99
44Cardiovascular risk factors should be asked about and documented99
45The starting dose of methylphenidate should be the lowest available dose of the prescribed formulation8.59
49Atomoxetine should be titrated on a ‘milligram per kilogram’ basis77
50The dose of atomoxetine should be increased 7 days after initiation7.59
62Side-effects should be recorded at each dose change by parents8.59
86Compliance with medication should be assessed by discussion with the parent/carer and the child/young person99
95Height should be measured every 6 months99
96Weight should be measured 3 and 6 months after drug treatment has started and every 6 months thereafter99
97Height and weight should be recorded on a growth chart99
101The continuing benefit of medication should be formally reviewed and a decision documented on an annual basis with input from the parent/carer, young person and school99
14Where drug treatment is considered appropriate, methylphenidate, atomoxetine or dexamfetamine should be used9n/a[a]
16Reasons to choose atomoxetine should include unresponsive to methylphenidate or intolerable adverse effects9n/a[a]
13Clinicians should check and document whether or not the child can swallow pills77.3
48Stimulant drugs should be titrated with regular step-wise dose increases to achieve the minimum effect dose99
56The titration schedule should be documented at initiation specifying drug, dose, duration of each step and review date99
15Methylphenidate should normally be considered the first-line drug for treatment of ADHD9n/a[a]
25Before initiation of medication, different drug options in terms of benefits (e.g. different duration of action) and adverse effects should be discussed with parents and children (age >11)99
28Drug information sheets should include details of what parents should do if adverse effects occur99
29A medication protocol should include drug information sheets98.5
61The duration of the dose titration phase should be a maximum of 12 weeks (2–4 weeks between dose increments)88
84After the first 6 months (of medication maintenance) clinic follow-up should be every 6 months89
24A medication protocol should include a prescribing algorithm/flow chart8n/a[a]
59During titration the dose should be increased as required up to BNF limits88
32Before initiation of medication, parents and young people should be asked to list separately the 3 most desired outcomes of treatment88
Reasons to choose atomoxetine should include:
17Parent/child preference7n/a[a]
18History/risk of drug diversion7n/a[a]
19History/risk of substance misuse7n/a[a]

ADHD, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder; BNF, British National Formulary; MTA, Multimodal Treatment of ADHD; n/a, not applicable; NICE, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence; Texas, Texas Children's Medication Algorithm Project.

Additional statements (n=7) rated on importance only.

ADHD, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder; BNF, British National Formulary; MTA, Multimodal Treatment of ADHD; n/a, not applicable; NICE, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence; Texas, Texas Children's Medication Algorithm Project. Additional statements (n=7) rated on importance only. The expert group completed round one of the questionnaire online using www.surveymonkey.com and individualised questionnaires were emailed to panelists for round two. In the second round, respondents were given the option to either retain their original score or modify it in light of the group median score. Similar to other studies, the survey was performed exclusively online.[17,18] In line with the guidance of Jones & Hunter,[19] all feedback was anonymous.

Data analysis methodology

Cut-off points for consensus drew on convention/standards adopted by Morrison & Barratt[15] and Langlands et al; 20 how ever a broader percentage gap was used to determine whether a statement should be re-rated, to minimise the influence of a smaller number of participants in this study. The following criteria were employed: Items were considered to have metcrteria for consensus if 80% or more of the panel (10/12 members) rated the statement as 7, 8 or 9 (important/feasible) or as 1, 2 or 3 (unimportant/unfeasible). Items were re-presented in the second round if 50–79% of the panel rated an item as 7–9 or 1–3. Items were omitted from the second round if less than 50% of the panel rated an item as 7–9 or 1–3. Round one resulted in 43 statements meeting criteria for consensus on importance and/or feasibility, four of which were rated unimportant and/or unfeasible. Fifty-five statements were re-rated on importance and/or feasibility during round two. Ethical approval was granted by the local Research Ethics Committee and Research and Development Departments of Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust, Lincolnshire Partnership NHS Foundation Trust and Derbyshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust.

Results

Four different categories were used to cluster statements: Category 1: statements rated as important and feasible Category 2: statements rated as important but not feasible Category 3: statements rated as feasible but not important Category 4: statements rated as neither important nor feasible For the purpose of this paper, we only report on statements in category 1 or 2 as these two categories allow an understanding of what clinicians consider to be important in ADHD practice as well as highlighting difficulties in implementing these aspects into routine care. At the end of the Delphi study, 24 statements reached consensus as being both ‘important’ (important/very important) and ‘feasible’ (feasible/very feasible), supporting the inclusion of these in ADHD medication management protocol (Table 1). It should be noted that there are some instances where the final median score for a statement was high, but criteria for consensus (≥80 agreement) were not met. For example, a median score of 8, whereby 9/12 panelists scored 7–9 (statement 60).

ADHD assessment

The Delphi study revealed a consensus on both the importance and feasibility of assessing and describing impairment level alongside the NICE recommendation to document comorbid conditions (Table 1, statements 1 and 5). Whereas 80% (20/25) of survey respondents agreed that it was important to distinguish between the NICE ADHD guideline descriptions of moderate and severe ADHD during assessment, only 12% (3/25) of respondents thought that this was an easy distinction to make in practice. The possible difficulty in assessing ADHD-related impairment may potentially be exacerbated by its poor construct definition,[21-23] the need to assess impairment across multiple domains and disentangle impairment related to comorbid conditions, as well as the weak association between symptom severity and severity of impairment.[22-24]

Decision to medicate, drug choice and information provision to parents

The Delphi study revealed support for the NICE guideline that drug treatment should be offered to all children with severe ADHD (Table 1, statement 6) and that methylphenidate should normally be considered as the first line of drug treatment (Table 1, statement 15). However, whereas clinicians supported the clinical importance of the NICE guideline recommendation to offer behavioural advice alongside drug treatment (Table 2, statement 7) or to offer behavioural therapy prior to medication in cases of mild/moderate ADHD (Table 2, statement 9), there was no consensus on the feasibility of this. This may reflect a lack of resources within clinics; many NHS clinics are not commissioned or resourced to provide behavioural management advice or evidence-based parent programmes and so NHS healthcare professionals need to recommend that parents seek out this element of treatment from other agencies. This finding highlights the difficulty the NHS may have in implementing NICE ADHD guidance for access to behavioural interventions, suggesting that the recommendations were perhaps more aspirational than a reflection of what could currently be delivered in practice.
Table 2

Category 2 Delphi statements (n=19): rated as ‘important’ but ‘not feasible’

Delphi statement numberCategory 2 statementsImportance median scoreFeasibility median scoreSource: NICESource: MTA/TexasSource: stakeholderSource: study team
7Drug treatment should only be offered to children together with behavioural management advice8.56.5
9Children with mild/moderate ADHD should be offered behaviour therapy/parent training before a trial of medication is considered7.55
54Monitoring of improvement/adverse-effects using telephone/SMS or email contact with the parent/young person should occur weekly during the titration phase7.54.5
83During the first 6 months (of medication maintenance) clinic follow-up should be every 3 months8.58
98Heart rate and blood pressure should be monitored after each dose change99
100Heart rate and blood pressure should be recorded on a centile chart8.56
26Information sheets describing all available potential ADHD medications should be routinely provided to parents, young people (>11) and teachers8.56.5
27An information sheet on the medication to be prescribed should be routinely provided to parents, young people (>11), GPs and teachers97.8
30A designated individual (teacher/SENCO) within a school should be identified to provide feedback and liaison86
31For children in secondary school, more than one teacher's view should be acquired7.85
42A side-effect rating scale should be completed before initiation of medication7.36
52During titration, the child should be seen in clinic on a monthly basis87
10All pre-school children with ADHD should be offered behaviour therapy/parent training before a trial of medication is considered94
12In children with comorbid ODD/CD or mood disorders, ADHD medication should be used together with psychological interventions87
34The Conners short form (26 item) should be completed by parents at baseline (pre-medication)98
37The Conners short form (26 item) should be completed by teachers at baseline (pre-medication)8.55.5
40The Conners short form (26 item) self-report should be completed by young people (>11 years) at baseline (pre-medication)75
73At the end of the titration phase the side-effect scale should be repeated by parents76
76At the end of the titration phase the Conners short form (26 item)should be repeated by TEACHERS73

ADHD, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder; CD, conduct disorder; GP, general practitioner; MTA, Multimodal Treatment of ADHD; NICE, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence; ODD, oppositional defiant disorder; SENCO, special educational needs coordinator; Texas, Texas Children's Medication Algorithm Project.

The statements are based on information from their ascribed source; they have not been taken verbatim from each source.

ADHD, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder; CD, conduct disorder; GP, general practitioner; MTA, Multimodal Treatment of ADHD; NICE, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence; ODD, oppositional defiant disorder; SENCO, special educational needs coordinator; Texas, Texas Children's Medication Algorithm Project. The statements are based on information from their ascribed source; they have not been taken verbatim from each source. The importance and feasibility of discussing medication benefits and adverse effects with families also obtained consensus within the Delphi study (Table 1, statement 25) which was also highlighted as important by parent/carers in the focus group.

Medication initiation and titration

A consensus was reached in the Delphi study on both the importance and feasibility of NICE recommendations to document physical parameters (blood pressure, heart rate, weight and height; Table 1, statement 43) and cardiac risk factors before starting medication (Table 1, statement 44), administering the lowest available dose when prescribing methylphenidate and titrating up to BNF limits (Table 1, statements 45 and 59). Documenting the titration schedule at initiation, specifying drug, dose, duration of each step and review date (Table 1, statement 56), and titrating with regular stepwise dose increases (Table 1, statement 48) also met consensus on importance and feasibility, suggesting acceptance of more protocol-driven, MTA-style, titration schedules. Consensus also emerged on the importance and feasibility of a maximum duration of 12 weeks for titration, with 2–4 weeks between dose increments (Table 1, statement 61), longer than the 4–6 weeks for titration recommended by NICE. Support in our study for a longer duration of titration may reflect clinician views on the challenges of assessing improvement within 4–6 weeks in the multiple outcomes recommended by NICE (symptom reduction, behaviour change, educational/relationship improvement) within a patient group typified by the presence of comorbidities[21] and where teacher/parent feedback may conflict.[25] Furthermore, healthcare professionals from the workshop reported difficulties with patients not attending follow-up appointments regularly, thus potentially delaying clinical decision-making. Our findings suggested some conflict between the frequencies of contact deemed most beneficial as opposed to that deemed most feasible during titration. Consensus emerged on the importance of monthly clinic contact and weekly telephone/email contact with the family during titration and these schedules of contact were perceived as beneficial by 91% (20/22) and 82% (18/22) of online survey respondents respectively. However, there was no agreement on the feasibility of this approach (Table 2, statements 52 and 54).

Assessing response to medication: use of rating scales and assessment of side-effects

Support for the importance and feasibility of the NICE recommendation for parents to record side-effects at each dose change emerged from the Delphi study (Table 1, statement 62). However, 27% (6/22) of respondents from the online survey indicated that they did not use side-effect rating scales. Healthcare professionals commented at the workshop that assessment of side-effects was primarily achieved by monitoring physical health and via clinical enquiry; a lack of easily available and validated side-effect scales may be a barrier to their use. Clinicians reached a consensus on the importance of the administration of the Conners’ short form (26 item) questionnaire[26] with parents, teachers and the young person at baseline (Table 2, statements 34, 37 and 40). However, variation among healthcare professionals in the range and number of rating scales used in the UK has been previously reported[27] and clinical enquiry may be a preferred source of information: all online survey respondents (22/22) placed value on the parents’ view, the child's view and the parents’ perception of progress at school when determining response to medication.

Medication maintenance: frequency of clinic contact

NICE recommendations for annual reviews of medication, assessment of concordance with medication via discussion with parents and patient, and monitoring of height and weight at fixed intervals after starting medication all reached consensus for both importance and feasibility in the Delphi study (Table 1, statements 101, 86, 95 and 96). Delphi study findings indicate consensus on the importance and feasibility of clinic follow-ups every 6 months, after the first 6 months of treatment (Table 1, statement 84). This aligns with results from the online survey, whereby biannual contact during maintenance was rated as beneficial and feasible by 77% (17) and 95% (21) of respondents respectively. Delphi study responses met consensus on the importance of monitoring blood pressure and pulse after every dose change (Table 2, statement 98) and although the median score was high (9, very important) there was no consensus on the feasibility of this NICE recommendation, which healthcare professionals acknowledged as problematic to achieve in practice. This highlights an implementation challenge regarding obtaining recordings between clinic visits. This may be an area where home or ambulatory recordings sent electronically to the clinic using a telemedicine approach may help to bridge this implementation gap. The greater frequency of contact observed in the MTA's medication management arm provided opportunity to identify and immediately adjust changes in medication needs during maintenance, indicating a need for long-term close monitoring.[28] Additional forms of communication (email, SMS, smart telephone apps) could help to ensure adequate assessment of medication response if intensive face-to-face clinic monitoring is not feasible and may help to maintain the lines of communication desired by parents/carers.

Acquisition of feedback from school and importance of school input

The Delphi study revealed consensus for both the importance of having a nominated individual teacher to provide feedback and in the case of secondary school-age children, gathering information from more than one teacher (Table 2, statements 30 and 31). However, there was no consensus on the feasibility of this. Healthcare professionals from the workshop highlighted difficulties in getting school information, citing it was ‘time-consuming’. Obtaining teacher feedback relating to a child's response to treatment has been deemed ‘critical’[29] and is a NICE recommendation. However, our findings support previous research indicating that resource limitations are a barrier to guideline implementation.[30]

Discussion

Summary of main findings

Half (50%) of the NICE ADHD guideline recommendations included in the Delphi study were endorsed as being both clinically important and feasible to implement. These included assessment of ADHD-related impairment, baseline physical examination, recording of height, weight and parental reported side-effects, communicating reasons to use atomoxetine and methylphenidate (see Table 1 for complete list). Meanwhile, a subset of NICE recommendations, although regarded as clinically important, was identified as difficult or challenging to implement in routine UK clinical practice. These included delivery of adjunctive behavioural interventions, weekly monitoring (telephone/SMS/email) during titration, measuring pulse and blood pressure after every dose change during titration and recording pulse and blood pressure on a centile chart (see Table 2 for complete list).

Study strengths, limitations and future research

To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study which has explicitly sought to understand current consensus on medication management strategies for ADHD within the constraints of real-world practice. Whereas the number of Delphi panelists (n=12) may be considered relatively small, this is sufficient to demonstrate consensus. There is no consensus in the literature on optimum sample size[31] and panel sizes ranging from 10 to 1142 participants are apparent in published Delphi studies.[32] However, Jones & Hunter[19] recommend a Delphi panel size of between 9 and 12 participants. Although the sample size of the online survey, workshop and focus groups were also small, the combination of opinion of multiple stakeholders to inform the items of the Delphi survey enabled a more complete approach to understanding issues pertinent to clinicians, young people, parent and carers in relation to ADHD medication management. Given that the participant is often over-looked in determining ‘best practice’, our inclusion of this group is a real strength. This study only elicited the views of participants located within the East Midlands region of England; thus, it is possible that healthcare professionals working in different healthcare systems may make different judgements about the importance and feasibility of ADHD practice recommendations. Furthermore, the characteristics of the patients being treated by the healthcare professionals completing the Delphi study were not determined: it is likely that these too will have influenced judgements about what is important and feasible. Additionally, the use of self-report to determine current practices may have been subject to biases such as overestimation of adherence to guidelines[33] and triangulation with other objective assessments of patient management (e.g. case-note audits) would be a further method to characterise current practice. Given the lack of understanding of current consensus in medication management in the UK, it was important to first establish current opinion on what constitutes ‘best practice’ within the constraints of everyday practice. Further research should establish the extent to which protocols are adhered to and factors that influence non-adherence by combining audit data with survey responses or qualitative interviews. Given the importance of regular contact during titration, future research could investigate whether utilisation of technology, such as Skype or apps, could provide a satisfactory interface for such monitoring. Although not specific to ADHD medication monitoring, a recent study did explore service user opinion of routine monitoring via an electronic questionnaire in mental health settings.[30] The findings revealed that parents and children were supportive of the use of technology to report progress to their healthcare professional. Our study applied an iterative, mixed methods approach (literature review, online survey, stakeholder workshop and Delphi study) to determine previously unexplored perceptions of the implementation of national clinical guidelines and evidence-based recommendations for children and young people receiving medication for ADHD. Our findings indicate areas of agreement and discord with existing NICE[3] ADHD guidelines and conflict between the perceived importance of some best practice medication management strategies and the feasibility of their implementation. The study has identified a set of ADHD practice recommendations that are viewed by clinicians as important but currently not feasible to implement. These recommendations should be the focus of health service implementation strategies and research. Clinician feedback indicated that the intensive monitoring schedules of the MTA protocol are currently regarded as impractical in routine UK practice and the time needed to titrate medication is likely to extend beyond that recommended by NICE guidelines. The use of technology to automate data collection and provide digital communication may be particularly relevant for aspects of practice viewed as important but currently unfeasible. The Delphi study findings have identified recommendations for practice where implementation challenges remain and clinical consensus is still to be reached. These findings could inform the update of the NICE ADHD clinical guideline and focus implementation strategies on those statements identified as important but not presently feasible to deliver in routine care. One potential area for development is the application of digital technologies to assist remote monitoring and follow-up during medication titration and optimisation.
  27 in total

Review 1.  Evidence of self-report bias in assessing adherence to guidelines.

Authors:  A S Adams; S B Soumerai; J Lomas; D Ross-Degnan
Journal:  Int J Qual Health Care       Date:  1999-06       Impact factor: 2.038

2.  A 14-month randomized clinical trial of treatment strategies for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. The MTA Cooperative Group. Multimodal Treatment Study of Children with ADHD.

Authors: 
Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry       Date:  1999-12

3.  Stability of response characteristics of a Delphi panel: application of bootstrap data expansion.

Authors:  Ralitsa B Akins; Homer Tolson; Bryan R Cole
Journal:  BMC Med Res Methodol       Date:  2005-12-01       Impact factor: 4.615

4.  Symptoms versus impairment: the case for respecting DSM-IV's Criterion D.

Authors:  Michael Gordon; Kevin Antshel; Stephen Faraone; Russell Barkley; Larry Lewandowski; James J Hudziak; Joseph Biederman; Charles Cunningham
Journal:  J Atten Disord       Date:  2006-02       Impact factor: 3.256

5.  What are the components of CBT for psychosis? A Delphi study.

Authors:  Anthony P Morrison; Sarah Barratt
Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  2009-10-30       Impact factor: 9.306

6.  Medication treatment strategies in the MTA Study: relevance to clinicians and researchers.

Authors:  L L Greenhill; H B Abikoff; L E Arnold; D P Cantwell; C K Conners; G Elliott; L Hechtman; S P Hinshaw; B Hoza; P S Jensen; J S March; J Newcorn; W E Pelham; J B Severe; J M Swanson; B Vitiello; K Wells
Journal:  J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry       Date:  1996-10       Impact factor: 8.829

7.  Parent-teacher concordance for DSM-IV attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in a clinic-referred sample.

Authors:  E M Mitsis; K E McKay; K P Schulz; J H Newcorn; J M Halperin
Journal:  J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry       Date:  2000-03       Impact factor: 8.829

8.  Clinical relevance of the primary findings of the MTA: success rates based on severity of ADHD and ODD symptoms at the end of treatment.

Authors:  J M Swanson; H C Kraemer; S P Hinshaw; L E Arnold; C K Conners; H B Abikoff; W Clevenger; M Davies; G R Elliott; L L Greenhill; L Hechtman; B Hoza; P S Jensen; J S March; J H Newcorn; E B Owens; W E Pelham; E Schiller; J B Severe; S Simpson; B Vitiello; K Wells; T Wigal; M Wu
Journal:  J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry       Date:  2001-02       Impact factor: 8.829

Review 9.  Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in adults: an overview.

Authors:  S V Faraone; J Biederman; T Spencer; T Wilens; L J Seidman; E Mick; A E Doyle
Journal:  Biol Psychiatry       Date:  2000-07-01       Impact factor: 13.382

10.  'Mind the gap'--mapping services for young people with ADHD transitioning from child to adult mental health services.

Authors:  Charlotte L Hall; Karen Newell; John Taylor; Kapil Sayal; Katie D Swift; Chris Hollis
Journal:  BMC Psychiatry       Date:  2013-07-10       Impact factor: 3.630

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  7 in total

1.  Consensus workshops on the development of an ADHD medication management protocol using QbTest: developing a clinical trial protocol with multidisciplinary stakeholders.

Authors:  Charlotte L Hall; Susan Brown; Marilyn James; Jennifer L Martin; Nikki Brown; Kim Selby; Julie Clarke; Laura Williams; Kapil Sayal; Chris Hollis; Madeleine J Groom
Journal:  BMC Med Res Methodol       Date:  2019-06-18       Impact factor: 4.615

2.  Study of user experience of an objective test (QbTest) to aid ADHD assessment and medication management: a multi-methods approach.

Authors:  Charlotte L Hall; Althea Z Valentine; Gemma M Walker; Harriet M Ball; Heather Cogger; David Daley; Madeleine J Groom; Kapil Sayal; Chris Hollis
Journal:  BMC Psychiatry       Date:  2017-02-10       Impact factor: 3.630

3.  Access to diagnosis, treatment, and supportive services among pharmacotherapy-treated children/adolescents with ADHD in Europe: data from the Caregiver Perspective on Pediatric ADHD survey.

Authors:  Moshe Fridman; Tobias Banaschewski; Vanja Sikirica; Javier Quintero; Kristina S Chen
Journal:  Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat       Date:  2017-03-30       Impact factor: 2.570

4.  Guideline adherence in the management of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in children: An audit of selected medical records in three Australian states.

Authors:  Louise A Ellis; Brette Blakely; Philip Hazell; Sue Woolfenden; Harriet Hiscock; Vanessa Sarkozy; Bronwyn Gould; Peter D Hibbert; Gaston Arnolda; Hsuen P Ting; Louise K Wiles; Charlotte J Molloy; Kate Churruca; Meagan Warwick; Jeffrey Braithwaite
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-02-08       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Optimising medication management in children and young people with ADHD using a computerised test (QbTest): a feasibility randomised controlled trial.

Authors:  Laura Williams; Charlotte L Hall; Sue Brown; Boliang Guo; Marilyn James; Matilde Franceschini; Julie Clarke; Kim Selby; Hena Vijayan; Neeta Kulkarni; Nikki Brown; Kapil Sayal; Chris Hollis; Madeleine J Groom
Journal:  Pilot Feasibility Stud       Date:  2021-03-16

6.  Protocol investigating the clinical utility of an objective measure of attention, impulsivity and activity (QbTest) for optimising medication management in children and young people with ADHD 'QbTest Utility for Optimising Treatment in ADHD' (QUOTA): a feasibility randomised controlled trial.

Authors:  Charlotte L Hall; Marilyn James; Sue Brown; Jennifer L Martin; Nikki Brown; Kim Selby; Julie Clarke; Hena Vijayan; Boliang Guo; Kapil Sayal; Chris Hollis; Madeleine J Groom
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2018-02-15       Impact factor: 2.692

7.  Exploring the Effects of Pharmacological, Psychosocial, and Alternative/Complementary Interventions in Children and Adolescents With Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: Meta-Regression Approach.

Authors:  Kung-Han Yang; Hsien-Yuan Lane; Yue-Cune Chang; Ruu-Fen Tzang
Journal:  Int J Neuropsychopharmacol       Date:  2021-10-23       Impact factor: 5.176

  7 in total

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