| Literature DB >> 28236285 |
Leonie Hennissen1, Mireille J Bakker1, Tobias Banaschewski2, Sara Carucci3, David Coghill4,5, Marina Danckaerts6, Ralf W Dittmann2, Chris Hollis7, Hanna Kovshoff8, Suzanne McCarthy9, Peter Nagy10, Edmund Sonuga-Barke8, Ian C K Wong11,12, Alessandro Zuddas3, Eric Rosenthal13, Jan K Buitelaar14,15.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many children and adolescents with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are treated with stimulant and non-stimulant medication. ADHD medication may be associated with cardiovascular effects. It is important to identify whether mean group effects translate into clinically relevant increases for some individual patients, and/or increase the risk for serious cardiovascular adverse events such as stroke or sudden death.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28236285 PMCID: PMC5336546 DOI: 10.1007/s40263-017-0410-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CNS Drugs ISSN: 1172-7047 Impact factor: 5.749
Fig. 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMAa) flow diagram on cardiovascular effects. a PRISMA Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (http://www.prisma-statement.org). bReferences from identified articles and relevant published reviews were manually searched to identify additional related publications. cThese studies were about the influence of doses on cardiovascular measurements and had no post measurement. MPH methylphenidate, AMP amphetamines, ATX atomoxetine
Summary of characteristics of studies included in meta-analyses with cardiovascular parameters
| Study | Type of medication | Study design | Sample size, | Mean age, y (range) | Male, % | Type of comparison | Doses, mean [SD] or range per day | Length of study/observation, weeks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MPH | ||||||||
| Buitelaar et al. [ | MPH | Prospective, double-blind placebo-controlled study | 46 (NR) | 9.3 (7–13) | 88 | Pindolol and placebo | 20 mg | 4 |
| Hammerness et al. [ | OROS-MPH | Open-label study | 114 (50) | 14.1 (12–18) | 73 | NR | 0.5–1.75 mg/kg | 24 |
| Kim et al. [ | OROS-MPH | Prospective, open-label, flexible-dose | 24 (11.1) | 8.2 (6–12) | 92 | NR | 18–45 mg | 24 |
| Lee et al. [ | OROS-MPH | Open-label study | 47 (14.5) | 14.3 (12–18) | 78 | NR | 18–72 mg | 12 |
| Wilens et al. [ | OROS-MPH | Open-label study | 432 (29) | NR (6–13) | NR | NR | 18–54 mg | 48 |
| Zeiner [ | MPH | Open-label study | 23 (13) | 9.3 (7–12) | 100 | No medication | 0.55 mg/kg | 84 |
| AMP | ||||||||
| Coghill et al. [ | LDX | Open-label trial | 276 (39.9) | 10.9 (6–17) | 76.8 | Placebo | 30–70 mg | 52 |
| Donner et al. [ | MAS XR | Prospective, open-label, no comparative, community-based study | 2968 (1.2) | 9.5 (6–13) | 76.1 | Doses | 10–40 mg | 14 |
| Findling et al. [ | LDX | Open-label, multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled study | 314 (42) | 14.5 (13–17) | 70.6 | Placebo (no data) | 30–70 mg | 52 |
| Wilens et al. [ | MAS XR | Open-label study | 138 (NR) | 14.4 | 71.0 | NR | 10–40 mg | 16 |
| ATX | ||||||||
| Fuentes et al. [ | ATX | Randomised, controlled, open-label study | 199 (21.1) | 9.2 (6–16) | 79.4 | Any other pharmacological ADHD treatment | 0.5–1.8 mg/kg | 48 |
| Ghuman et al. [ | ATX | Open-label pilot study | 12 (0) | 5.0 (3.5–5.8) | 75 | NR | Up titration 18–40 mg | 6 |
| Hammerness et al. [ | ATX | Two-phase open study | 72 (16.7) | 9.3 (6–17) | 76 | ATX (vs ATX and OROS-MPH) | ATX 0.5–1.4 mg/kg | 4 |
| >1 medication | ||||||||
| Arcieri et al. [ | MPH | Open-label, prospective, observational study | 351 (82.6) | 10.4 (6–18) | 87 | MPH and BTa | MPH 18.4 (10.4) | 96 |
| 350 (89.1) | 10.8 (6–18) | 90 | ATX and BT | ATX 38.6 (20.5) | ||||
| Dittmann et al. [ | LDX | Head-to-head, randomised, double-blind, active-controlled study | 128 (24.8) | 10.9 (3.01) | 75.2 | LDX | LDX 30–70 mg | 9 |
| 134 (24.6) | 10.4 (2.84) | 76.9 | ATX | |||||
| Kratochvil et al. [ | MPH | A prospective, randomised, open-label | 40 (37.5) | 10.4 (7–15) | 100 | MPH | 5–60 mg | 10 |
| 180 (35.9) | 10.4 (7–15) | 90.8 | ATX | 0.2–1.0 mg/kg | 10 | |||
| Sangal et al. [ | MPH | Randomised, double-blind crossover | 83 (5.3) | 10.1 (6–14) | 75 | MPH | 0.45–1.8 mg/kg | 7 |
| 81 (NR) | NR | NR | ATX | NR | 7 | |||
| Yildiz et al. [ | OROS-MPH | Open-label study | 11 (13.3) | 9.0 (8–13) | 82 | OROS-MPH | 18–54 mg | 12 |
| 14 (17.6) | 9.78 (8–12) | 93 | ATX | 18–60 mg | 12 | |||
AMP amphetamines, ATX atomoxetine, LDX lisdexamfetamine dimesylate, MAS XR amphetamine salts extended release, MPH methylphenidate, NR not reported, OROS-MPH osmotic release oral system—MPH (Concerta®), SD standard deviation
aBehaviour treatment (BT) involves child/parent/family training, psychodynamic therapy or counselling
bStudy with only heart rate data
Fig. 2Forest plots with pre–post standardised mean differences SMDs (ES) and homogeneity statistics for meta-analyses of DBP, SBP and HR. The forest plots represent each study in the meta-analysis, plotted according to the SMD. The SMD is the difference between the pre-test and the post-test divided by the pooled pre-test and post-test standard deviation. The green box on each line shows the SMD for each study. The size of the box stands for the size of the sample size. The black diamond at the bottom of the graph shows the average SMD of all studies of all medications. If a green box or the black diamond stands on the left side of the middle line, this represents a higher DBP, SBP or HR on the pre-test in comparison with the post-test, so a decrease. A box/diamond on the right side of the middle line represents a higher DBP, SBP or HR on the post-test in comparison with the pre-test, so an increase. If the green box or the black diamond crosses the middle line, then this study reported no significant effect. For more explanation about forest plots, see [58]. AMP amphetamines, ATX atomoxetine, CI confidence interval, DBP diastolic blood pressure, df degrees of freedom, ES effect size, HR heart rate, MPH methylphenidate, SBP systolic blood pressure, SMD standard mean difference
Summary of all cardiovascular effects reported in studies included in this meta-analysis
| Study | Hypertension and heart rate >90th percentile | Tachycardia | Brachycardia | Other cardiovascular effects | ECG abnormalities | Discontinued treatment due to cardiovascular effect/moment of discontinuation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MPH | ||||||
| Arcieri et al. [ | NR | 6/351 (1.7%) | 10/351 (2.8%) | 1/351 (0.3%) arrhythmia | 4.7% (6 mo), 10% (12 mo), 10.4% (24 mo) | 1(Altered ECG, arrhythmia)/after 6 mo |
| Buitelaar et al. [ | NR | NR | NR | NR | No ECG | 0 |
| Hammerness et al. [ | 6% ( | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0% | 1 (recurrent palpitations)/after first 6 wk |
| Kim et al. [ | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0% | 0 |
| Kratochvil et al. [ | NR | 2/40 (5%) | NR | 0 | 0% | NR if was due to cardiovascular event |
| Lee et al. [ | NR | NR | NR | 0 | No ECG | 0 |
| Sangal et al. [ | NR | NR | NR | 0 | 0% | 0 |
| Wilens et al. [ | 1 SBP >130 mmHg | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 1 (SBP >130 mmHg at 2 min occasions)/NR |
| Yildiz et al. [ | NR | NR | NR | 0 | 0% | 2/NR |
| Zeiner [ | NR | NR | NR | NR | No ECG | NR |
| AMP | ||||||
| Coghill et al. [ | NR | NR | NR | NR | No ECG | 0 |
| Dittmann et al. [ | 11/94 (11.7%) DBP >80 mmHg | NR | NR | NR | 8/83 (9.6%) | 0 |
| Donner et al. [ | 2.5% SBP or DBP values that were >95th percentile | 2 (0.1%) | NR | 7/2968 (0.2%) including hypertension, palpitations, and tachycardia (no numbers of events separately) | 63 (2.1%) | 9 cardiovascular events, including hypertension, palpitations, and tachycardia (no numbers of effect separately), 1 right bundle branch block, 1 prolonged QT interval/NR |
| Findling et al. [ | 33/265 (12.5%) SBP >120 mmHg + increase of 10 mmHg | NR | NR | NR | 12/257 (4.7%) | 0 |
| Wilens et al. [ | 21 increase of DBP >10 mmHg | 1 | NR | NR | 34/138 at baseline | 0 |
| ATX | ||||||
| Arcieri et al. [ | NR | 6/350 | 1/350 (0.3%) | 1/350 (0.3%) arrhythmia | After 6 mo: 8 (3.6%) | 1 (arrhythmia)/after 6 mo |
| Dittmann et al. [ | Children: | NR | NR | NR | 8/91 (1.1%) HR >100 bpm | 0 |
| Fuentes et al. [ | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | 0 |
| Ghuman et al. [ | NR | NR | NR | 0 | 0% | 0 |
| Hammerness et al. [ | 1 HR >120 bpm | NR | NR | NR | 0% | 0 |
| Kratochvil et al. [ | NR | 11/184 (6%) | NR | 0 | 0% | 0 |
| Sangal et al. [ | NR | NR | NR | NR | 0% | 0 |
| Yildiz et al. [ | NR | NR | NR | NR | 0% | 0 |
AMP amphetamine, ATX atomoxetine, BMI body mass index, bpm beats per minute, DBP diastolic blood pressure, ECG echocardiogram, HR heart rate, MPH methylphenidate, NR not reported, QTc QT interval corrected, QTcF QT interval corrected using Fridericia’s formula, SBP systolic blood pressure
| Attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a common neuropsychiatric disorder for which medication plays a pivotal role for clinical management. |
| Amphetamine and atomoxetine were associated with small but statistically significant pre–post increases in systolic and diastolic blood pressure and heart rate in children and adolescents with ADHD, while methylphenidate treatment had this effect only on systolic blood pressure in these individuals. |
| Of the participants on medication, 12.6% reported other cardiovascular effects and 2% discontinued their medication treatment due to any cardiovascular effect; other cardiovascular effects resolved spontaneously, medication doses were changed or the effects were not considered clinically relevant. There were no significant differences in terms of the severity of cardiovascular effects between the medication treatments. |
| More research into the long-term effects on the left ventricular mass of these relatively small changes of blood pressure and heart rate associated with ADHD medication treatment is required. |