| Literature DB >> 27752827 |
Susan Young1,2,3, Brynjar Emilsson4,5, Jon Fridrik Sigurdsson6,5,7, Mizanur Khondoker4,8, Florence Philipp-Wiegmann9,4, Gisli Baldursson5, Halldora Olafsdottir5, Gisli Gudjonsson9,6,4.
Abstract
Studies assessing psychological treatment of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in adults are increasingly reported. However, functional outcomes are often neglected in favour of symptom outcomes. We investigated functional outcomes in 95 adults with ADHD who were already treated with medication and randomized to receive treatment as usual (TAU/MED) or psychological treatment (CBT/MED) using a cognitive-behavioural programme, R&R2ADHD, which employs both group and individual modalities. RATE-S functional outcomes associated with ADHD symptoms, social functioning, emotional control and antisocial behaviour were given at baseline, end of treatment and three-month follow-up. The Total composite score of these scales is associated with life satisfaction. In addition, independent evaluator ratings of clinicians who were blind to treatment arm were obtained on the Clinical Global Impression scale at each time point. CBT/MED showed overall (combined outcome at end of treatment and 3-month follow-up) significantly greater functional improvement on all scales. Post-group treatment effects were maintained at follow-up with the exception of emotional control and the Total composite scales, which continued to improve. The largest treatment effect was for the RATE-S Total composite scale, associated with life satisfaction. CGI significantly correlated with all outcomes except for social functioning scale at follow-up. The study provides further evidence for the effectiveness of R&R2ADHD and demonstrates the importance of measuring functional outcomes. The key mechanism associated with improved functional outcomes is likely to be behavioural control.Entities:
Keywords: ADHD; Cognitive behaviour therapy; R&R2; RCT; Reasoning and rehabilitation; Treatment
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27752827 PMCID: PMC5357275 DOI: 10.1007/s00406-016-0735-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci ISSN: 0940-1334 Impact factor: 5.270
Fig. 1Flow chart of patient participation
Demographic, clinical and baseline characteristics of the study sample (n = 95)
| Total | CBT/MED | TAU/MED | Statistics | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender and age | ||||
| Men | 33 (43.7 %) | 18 (37.5 %) | 15 (31.9 %) |
|
| Marital status | ||||
| Single | 47 (49.5 %) | 23 (48.9 %) | 24 (51.1 %) |
|
| Employment status | ||||
| Employed | 41 (43.2 %) | 18 (37.5 %) | 23 (48.9 %) |
|
| Medical history | ||||
| History of serious illness | 27 (28.4 %) | 13 (27.1 %) | 14 (29.8 %) |
|
| ADHD-specific medication | ||||
| Methylphenidate | 73 (83.2 %) | 40 (83.3 %) | 33 (83.0 %) |
|
* Other medications include for example antidepressants, benzodiazepines, insulin and ibuprofen
Outcome measures in the CBT/MED and TAU/MED conditions and statistics of the baseline measurements
| Outcome | CBT/MED | TAU/MED | Statistics of the baseline measurements between groups | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline mean (SD) | End of treatment mean (SD) | Follow-up mean (SD) | Baseline mean (SD) | End of treatment mean (SD) | Follow-up mean (SD) | ||
| RATE | 116.60 (28.63) | 99.52 (25.77) | 87.36 (25.16) | 119.28 (27.96) | 117.11 (25.46) | 115.16 (28.38) |
|
| RATE | 41.76 (11.05) | 34.30 (10.30) | 29.28 (11.47) | 40.39 (12.05) | 38.77 (11.56) | 38.66 (11.93) |
|
| RATE | 33.16 (14.12) | 27.67 (10.92) | 22.84 (9.16) | 34.59 (12.34) | 31.97 (12.54) | 31.38 (12.93) | t(89) = − 0.515, |
| RATE | 11.27 (3.85) | 9.24 (1.52) | 8.76 (1.67) | 12.28 (6.27) | 10.29 (2.38) | 11.19 (4.03) |
|
| RATE | 30.42 (8.43) | 28.30 (9.19) | 26.48 (8.20) | 32.02 (9.35) | 36.09 (10.44) | 33.94 (10.08) |
|
| Clinical global impression | 3.96 (0.81) | 3.03 (1.05) | 3.14 (0.79) | 3.91 (1.10) | 3.79 (0.77) | 3.80 (0.96) |
|
Estimated treatment effect from the linear mixed model analyses with adjusted effect sizes (Cohen’s d) from the model
| Outcome | Coef.( | Standard error |
| 95 % CI | Effect size ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RATE-S | −16.98 | 4.04 | <0.001 | (−24.90, − 9.06) | 0.54 |
| RATE-S | −5.64 | 1.58 | <0.001 | (−8.75, − 2.53) | 0.55 |
| RATE-S | −4.61 | 1.92 | 0.017 | (−8.38, − 0.84) | 0.32 |
| RATE-S | −1.4 | 0.43 | 0.001 | (−2.24, − 0.56) | 0.50 |
| RATE-S | −5.31 | 1.48 | <0.001 | (−8.21, − 2.41) | 0.41 |
Correlations between the Clinical Global Impression (CGI) scale at three time periods with the relevant RATE-S scores
| Outcome | CGI | CGI | CGI |
|---|---|---|---|
| RATE-S | 0.46*** | 0.52*** | 0.54*** |
| RATE-S | 0.41*** | 0.50*** | 0.51*** |
| RATE-S | 0.31** | 0.33** | 0.43** |
| RATE-S | 0.31** | 0.13 | 0.43** |
| RATE-S | 0.29** | 0.43** | 0.23 |
**p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001