| Literature DB >> 36224169 |
Giorgia Michelini1,2, Luke J Norman3, Philip Shaw3,4, Sandra K Loo5.
Abstract
The development of treatment biomarkers for psychiatric disorders has been challenging, particularly for heterogeneous neurodevelopmental conditions such as attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Promising findings are also rarely translated into clinical practice, especially with regard to treatment decisions and development of novel treatments. Despite this slow progress, the available neuroimaging, electrophysiological (EEG) and genetic literature provides a solid foundation for biomarker discovery. This article gives an updated review of promising treatment biomarkers for ADHD which may enhance personalized medicine and novel treatment development. The available literature points to promising pre-treatment profiles predicting efficacy of various pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments for ADHD. These candidate predictive biomarkers, particularly those based on low-cost and non-invasive EEG assessments, show promise for the future stratification of patients to specific treatments. Studies with repeated biomarker assessments further show that different treatments produce distinct changes in brain profiles, which track treatment-related clinical improvements. These candidate monitoring/response biomarkers may aid future monitoring of treatment effects and point to mechanistic targets for novel treatments, such as neurotherapies. Nevertheless, existing research does not support any immediate clinical applications of treatment biomarkers for ADHD. Key barriers are the paucity of replications and external validations, the use of small and homogeneous samples of predominantly White children, and practical limitations, including the cost and technical requirements of biomarker assessments and their unknown feasibility and acceptability for people with ADHD. We conclude with a discussion of future directions and methodological changes to promote clinical translation and enhance personalized treatment decisions for diverse groups of individuals with ADHD.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36224169 PMCID: PMC9556670 DOI: 10.1038/s41398-022-02207-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Psychiatry ISSN: 2158-3188 Impact factor: 7.989
Fig. 1Timeline showing points through clinical course where different categories of biomarkers (adapted from the Food and Drug Administration Biomarkers, EndpointS, and other Tools Resource [13]) have the potential to impact clinical practices in psychiatry.
This review focuses specifically on treatment biomarkers.
Details of MRI studies investigating candidate predictive/prognostic biomarkers for treatment response.
| Authors, year | Country | N ADHD | N Controls | Age | % Male | % White | Design | Candidate biomarker(s) | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Griffiths et al. [ | Australia | 37 (19 had taken psychostimulants in the previous 6-months, and underwent a washout period) | 26 | 70% | Not reported | 6-week open label study of MPH, pre-treatment neuroimaging | White matter local efficiency (graph theoretical measure of how efficiently information can be distributed between a brain region and its neighbors) | Support vector machine learning algorithm applied to multivariate measures of local efficiency predict treatment response assessed at 6-weeks using the ADHD-RS-IV. The most predictive features were higher local efficiency of the thalamus, precentral gyrus and DLPFC. | |
| Hong et al. [ | South Korea | 83 (medication-free for >4 weeks, and with no history of long-term treatment for ADHD, defined as medicated >6 months) | 22 | 25% | Not reported | 8-week RCT of MPH, pre-treatment neuroimaging | Resting-state connectivity assessed using striatal seeds | Treatment responders ( | |
| Kim et al. [ | South Korea | 67 (medication-free for >4 weeks, and with no history of long-term treatment for ADHD, defined as medicated >6 months) | 25 | 25% | Not reported | 8-week RCT of MPH, pre-treatment neuroimaging | Subcortical volume | Responders had smaller volumes in bilateral amygdala and hippocampal subregions and right thalamus than non-responders. | |
| Lam et al. [ | UK | 31 (24 subjects were receiving stable medication) | 0 | 100% | Not reported | 2-week real-time fMRI neurofeedback of the right IFG vs. neurofeedback of a control para-hippocampal region. Single-blind RCT | Brain activation during inhibitory control task as a predictor of neurofeedback learning | Better neurofeedback learning was associated with pre-treatment activation in left IFG/insula and striatum during the fMRI stop task. | |
| Mizuno et al. [ | Japan | 27 (all medication-free for >5 times half-lives) | 49 | 100% | Not reported | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover design comparing single-dose MPH and placebo | Dynamic resting-state functional connectivity | Dynamic network interactions under placebo predicted individual differences in sustained attention improvements under MPH. | |
| Moreno et al. [ | Spain | 27 (all treatment naïve) | 0 | 70% | Not reported | 4-week open-label trial of MPH, pre-treatment neuroimaging | Subcortical gray matter concentration | Treatment responders, as defined via clinical interview and administration of CGI and CGAS, showed greater gray matter concentration within the nucleus accumbens and caudate compared with non-responders. | |
| Norman et al. [ | USA | 110 (medicated) | 142 | age range, 6–17 years | 65% | Not reported | Naturalistic longitudinal study of chronically medicated subjects, including up to 5 assessments. Scanning was performed during washout period. | Resting-state connectivity within and between cingulo-opercular, default mode and subcortical networks was assessed while subjects were off medication. | ADHD symptoms were rated on and off medication using the DICA-IV interview for parents. Non-responders showed developmentally atypical increases in cingulo-opercular connectivity with age, while responders showed a developmental trajectory that tracked that of the controls. |
| Peterson et al. [ | USA | 16 (psychostimulant responders) | 20 | 69% | 94% | Non-blinded study of chronically medicated psychostimulant responders with ADHD. Subjects were scanned on and off medication | Brain activation was assessed during a stop task both on and off medication | Off-medication left lateral prefrontal cortex activation correlated with differences in total ADHD symptoms, which were assessed using on and off medication versions of the CPRS in youth with ADHD. | |
| Schulz et al. [ | USA | 36 (medication-naïve) | 0 | 83% | Not reported | 8-week MPH/ATX randomized cross-over design, pre-treatment | Brain activation during a go/no-go task | Greater pre-treatment caudate activation was associated with a better treatment response to MPH, but a worse response to ATX, as assessed using ADHD-RS-IV. |
ADHD attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, ADHD-RS-IV ADHD Rating Scale-IV, ATX atomoxetine, CGAS Children’s Global Assessment Scale, CGI Clinical Global Impressions scale, CPRS Conners’ Parent Rating Scale, DICA-IV Diagnostic Interview for Children and Adolescents – IV; fMRI functional magnetic resonance imaging; IFG inferior prefrontal gyrus, MPH methylphenidate, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, RCT randomized controlled trial.
Details of EEG studies investigating candidate predictive/prognostic biomarkers for treatment response.
| Authors, year | Country | N ADHD | N Control | Age | % Male | % White | Design | Candidate biomarker(s) | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arns et al. [ | USA, Australia, Netherlands | 336 (all medication free for >7 days) | 158 | 72% | Not reported | 6-week MPH, open label | iAPF during rest | Lower pre-treatment frontal iAPF in male adolescent non-responders relative to responders. No difference in pre-treatment TBR, age, medication dosage, ADHD severity. | |
| Chiarenza et al. [ | Italy | 61 (all medication free for >5 times half-lives) | Not reported (reference database) | 85% | Not reported | 12-month ATX, open label | Absolute power across frequency bands during rest | Higher pre-treatment frontal alpha and fronto-temporal delta and theta power in responders relative to controls. Higher pre-treatment absolute power in all frequency bands (especially frontal and central) in non-responders relative to controls. | |
| Griffiths et al. [ | Australia | 52 (all medication free) | 52 | 83% | Not reported | 6-week ATX vs. placebo, cross-over RCT | N2 amplitude during an auditory oddball task | Lower pre-treatment N2 amplitudes (especially right fronto-central) in responders relative to non-responders and controls. N2 predicted responders vs. non-responders with specificity = 80.8% and sensitivity = 47.1% in a leave-one-out cross validation analyses. | |
| Krepel et al.[ | Netherlands, Germany, Australia | 136 (43 medication free, 93 medicated) | 0 | 89% | Not reported | QEEG-informed NF (NF protocols based on individual EEG), open label | P3 amplitude (females), iAPF (males) during rest | Shorter pre-treatment P3 latencies in girls/women who remitted; lower pre-treatment iAPFs in boys/men who remitted. | |
| Leuchter et al. [ | USA | 44 (medication free for >10 days) | 0 | Range = 18–30 | Not reported | Not reported | 12-week ATX vs. placebo RCT | Change in theta cordance during rest at 1-week post-treatment | Lower left temporoparietal theta cordance at 1-week post-treatment in ATX responders relative to non-responders. No difference between placebo responders and non-responders. Lower theta cordance predicted improvement in ADHD symptoms and quality of life. No association between absolute and relative power measures and clinical outcomes. |
| Loo et al. [ | USA | 51 (all medication free for >1 month) | 0 | 67% | Not reported | 4-week active vs. sham TNS, RCT | Theta and alpha power during rest | Lower pre-treatment right-frontal theta and alpha power in responders relative to non-responders. Treatment-related change right-frontal theta predicted response AUC = 00.81. | |
| Luo et al. [ | China | 121 | 0 | 83% | Not reported | 3-month remote computerized cognitive, NF, and combined training, RCT | Relative alpha power during rest | Pre-training relative alpha power correlated positively with ADHD improvements. | |
| Michelini et al. [ | USA | 207 (all medication naïve or medication free for >5 times half-lives) | 0 | 68% | 83% | 8-week MPH, GUAN, MPH + GUAN, RCT | Event-related midfrontal beta power localized in the ACC during the Sternberg spatial working memory task with encoding, maintenance and retrieval phases | Weaker mid-frontal beta power modulations across task phases predicted greater ADHD improvements with MPH + GUAN. Stronger mid-frontal beta power modulations predicted clinical improvements with GUAN (during retrieval) and binary response with MPH (during encoding). Mid-frontal beta & clinical measures at pre-treatment explained | |
| Ogrim et al. [ | Norway | 98 | 90 | Range = 7–17 | 67% | Not reported | 4-week MPH or DEX, open label | Theta power, contingent negative variation, cue P3 and no-go-P3 during a cued go/no-go task | Higher pre-treatment frontal theta power and cue P3 amplitudes, more negative contingent negative variation amplitude and lower posterior alpha power and no-go P3 amplitudes in responders relative to no-responders. Cue P3, no-go P3, and excess theta predicted response in a multivariate model. No difference in iAPF between responders and non-responders. |
| Ogrim et al. [ | Norway | 87 | 0 | Range = 7–17 | 69% | Not reported | Single dose and 4-week MPH or DEX, open label | Theta/alpha power, no-go P3, contingent negative variation during cued go/no-go task | Higher pre-treatment Cz theta/alpha ratio, lower pre-treatment no-go P3, higher single-dose change in no-go P3 and lower single-dose change in contingent negative variation in responders than non-responders. An aggregate index of ERP and behavioral predictors yielded AUC = 91%, sensitivity=86%, specificity = 88%. |
| Sangal & Sangal [ | Not reported (probably USA) | 17 (all medication naïve or medication free for >5 times half-lives) | 0 | M = 10.9, SD = 3.0 | 71% | 82% | 10-week ATX, open label | Auditory P3 amplitude during visual and oddball tasks | Higher pre-treatment P3 amplitude across regions in responders relative to non-responders, yielding PPV = 0.88 and NPV = 0.67. |
| Sangal & Sangal [ | Not reported (probably USA) | 58 (all medication free for >1 month) | 0 | M = 10.5, SD = 2.1 | 72% | Not reported | 4-week ATX vs. MPH, cross-over RCT | Auditory P3 amplitude during visual and oddball tasks | Greater pre-treatment P3 amplitude across regions in ATX responders relative to non-responders; greater pre-treatment P3 amplitude at right temporal region in MPH responders relative to non-responders. |
| Sari Gokten et al. [ | Turkey | 51 | 0 | M = 8.57, SD = 1.75 | 82% | Not reported | 13-month MPH, open label | Delta, theta, gamma power, delta/beta, and TBR during rest | Higher pre-treatment delta power at F8, theta power at Fz, F4, C3, Cz, T5, gamma power at T6, lower beta power at F8 and P3, delta/beta ratio at F8 and TBR at F8, F3, Fz, F4, C3, Cz, P3, and T5 predicted greater hyperactivity improvement. Theta power at Cz and T5 and TBR at C3, Cz, and T5 also accurately classified responders vs. non-responders in logistic regressions. |
| Singh et al. [ | India | 50 (all medication naïve) | 0 | Range = 6–14 | 80% | Not reported | 6-week ATX, open label | Change in theta cordance during rest at 1-week post-treatment | Greater decrease in left temporoparietal theta cordance at 1 week in responders relative to on-responders. No difference between pre-treatment and 1 week in non-responders. |
| Voetterl et al. [ | Netherlands, Australia, USA | Transfer: 336 MPH & 136 NF; validation: 41 MPH & 71 NF. Exploration: 55 GUAN & 47 ATX | 0 | Range = 7–15 | 100% | Not reported | Various duration, MPH, multimodal NF with with sleep coaching, GUAN, ATX, open label or RCTs | iAPF during rest | Transfer phase: predicted gain in normalized remission of 17% to 30% after stratifying boys with a higher iAPF to MPH and boys with a lower iAPF to multimodal NF, respectively. Blinded out-of-sample validations: predicted gain in stratified normalized remission of 36% and 29%, respectively. Exploration phase: higher iAPF predicted remission with GUAN and lower iAPF predicted remission with ATX. |
| Young et al. [ | Not reported (probably Australia) | 35 | 0 | M = 13.3, SD = 2.48 | 58% | Not reported | Single dose and 6-month MPH, open label | P3b during auditory oddball task | Acute P3b amplitude changes accurately predicted treatment outcome in 81% of cases. |
ADHD attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, ATX atomoxetine, AUC area under the curve statistic, EEG electroencephalography, DEX dexamphetamine, ERP event relate potential, GUAN guanfacine, MPH methylphenidate, iAPF individual alpha peak frequency, M mean age, NF neurofeedback, NPV negative predictive value, PPV positive predictive value, SD standard deviation, TNS trigeminal nerve stimulation.
Details of genetic studies investigating candidate predictive biomarkers for treatment response.
| Authors, year | Country | N ADHD | N Control | Age | % Male | % White | Design | Candidate biomarker(s) | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brikell et al. [ | Denmark | Starting MPH ( | 0 | Range = 3–32 (age at first diagnosis) | 71% | 100% | Linked genetic and medical records | 16q23.3 locus | 16q23.3 locus (containing genes and variants associated with a range of neuropsychiatric phenotypes such as seasonal depression, alcohol intake and cerebellar volume) was significantly associated with switching medication. No genome-wide significant associations for starting or stopping treatment. No associations of ADHD PRS with treatment outcomes; bipolar disorder PRS and schizophrenia PRS predicted stopping stimulant medication. |
| Elia et al. [ | Europe, USA | 1013 (discovery sample) + 2493 (replication sample) | 4105 + 9222(replication sample) | Range = 6–18 | Not reported | 100% | Multiple samples of ADHD cases and controls | CNVs within metabotropic glutamate receptor network genes | ADHD-associated CNVs were concentrated in genes within a network of metabotropic glutamate receptor genes, affecting 11.3% of ADHD cases compared to 1.2% of unaffected controls. |
| Elia et al. [ | USA | 30 (all harboring mutations in metabotropic glutamate receptor network genes) | 0 | Range = 12–17 | 66% | 50% | 5-week, open-label, single-blind, placebo-controlled trial of the metabotropic glutamate activator receptor fasoracetam | CNVs within metabotropic glutamate receptor network genes | Individuals who harbored CNVs within this glutamatergic gene network had better therapeutic response. |
| Gul et al. [ | Turkey | 100 | 80 | Range = 6–15 | 66% | Not reported | 2-month ATX, open label | A SNP (rs3785143) tagging the SLC6A2 gene | rs3785143 showed association with ATX response, with CC homozygotes showing superior response. OR ~3 with wide confidence intervals (1.1–13.4) |
| Myer et al. [ | Multiple | 3647 | 0 | 83% | Multiple | Meta-analysis of candidate genes studies predicting MPH response | 10 repeat VNTR within the SLC6A3 gene; SNPs tagging the SLC6A2 gene | Homozygotes for the 10 repeat VNTR within the SLC6A3 gene encoding the dopamine transporter targeted by MOH show worse response. SNPs tagging the gene coding for the norepinephrine transposer (SLC6A2) were tied to altered responsivity. Response was also moderated by variants within the DRD4 gene, that in silico alters receptor expression, and near the ADRA2 gene, coding for the alpha-2-adrenergic receptor. A polymorphism within the enzyme, COMT, which reduces its potency in degrading catecholamines, was tied to increased response. | |
| Pagerols et al. [ | Spain (children), Brazil (adult) | 173 children (discovery sample) + 189 adults (replication sample) | 0 | Mean=9.6, SD = 2.9 | 84% (children), not reported (adults) | 100% | PRS for MPH response derived in children and tested in adults to predict MPH response at 8 weeks | None | No genome-wise significant hits in children and no association between the PRS for treatment response in adults. The set of genes containing SNPs nominally associated with response ( |
| Zhong et al. [ | China | 241 (most medication naïve, 13 medication free for >1 week) | 0 | Mean=9.2, SD = 2.2 | 85% | Not reported | 8/12-week MPH or ATX, open label | ADHD PRS | There were no genome-wide significant hits for treatment response. PRS for ADHD was found to predict a favorable response, explaining 2% of the variance. |
ADHD attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, ATX atomoxetine, CNV copy number variant; COMT Catechol-o-methyltransferase, GWAS genome-wide association study, M mean age, MPH methylphenidate; PRS polygenic risk score; RCT randomized controlled trial, SD standard deviation, SNP single nucleotides polymorphism, VNTR variable number tandem repeat.
Details of neuroimaging studies of candidate monitoring/response biomarkers.
| Authors, year | Country | N ADHD | N Controls | Age | % Male | % White | Design | Candidate biomarker(s) | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alegria et al. [ | UK | 31 (24 receiving stable medication) | 0 | 100% | Not reported | 2-week real-time fMRI neurofeedback of the right IFG vs. a control para-hippocampal region. Single-blind RCT. | Neurofeedback transfer effect (IFG upregulation in the absence of feedback) and brain activation during inhibitory control task | Improvements in ADHD symptoms over 2 weeks were observed in both groups, but only the active IFG-neurofeedback group showed transfer effects (increased IFG activation during transfer session), which correlated with clinical improvements assessed using the CPRS‐R ADHD index scale. | |
| An et al. [ | China | 23 (medication free for >1 month) | 32 | 100% | Not reported | Single-blind, counter balanced cross-over, placebo-controlled RCT, comparing MPH to placebo | ReHo | MPH decreased ReHo in the right lingual gyrus and right postcentral gyrus, and increased ReHo in left IFG and right orbitofrontal cortex. ReHo decreases in the right postcentral gyrus and superior parietal lobe following a single dose of MPH were negatively associated with changes in ADHD symptoms at the 8th week, as assessed using the ADHD RS-IV (examined in a subgroup of | |
| Criaud et al. [ | UK | 31 (24 receiving stable medication) | 0 | 100% | Not reported | 2-week real-time fMRI neurofeedback of the right IFG vs. a control para-hippocampal region. Single-blind RCT | Changes in brain activation during error-monitoring associated with right IFC and control neurofeedback | Increases in left insula/IFG/putamen activation during error trials was associated with improvements in ADHD symptoms assessed using the ADHD-RS-IV in the right IFG feedback group. | |
| Cubillo et al. [ | UK | 20 (all medication naïve) | 20 | Range = 10–17 years old | 100% | Not reported | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover RCT comparing single-dose MPH, ATX, and placebo | Task-related brain activation, assessed on and off single doses of MPH and ATX | In the working memory task, drugs increased fronto-temporo-striatal activation and deactivated the default-mode network. However, ATX alone increased and normalized right DLPFC activation, while MPH upregulated left IFG activation. |
| Cubillo et al. [ | UK | 19 (all medication naïve) | 29 | Range = 10–17 years old | 100% | Not reported | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover RCT comparing single-dose MPH, ATX, and placebo | Task-related brain activation, assessed on and off single doses of MPH and ATX. | During the stop task, both drugs significantly normalized left IFG underactivation observed under placebo. MPH also upregulated and normalized activation in right IFG. |
| Kowalczyk et al. [ | UK | 14 (all medication naïve) | :27 | Range = 10–17 years old | 100% | Not reported | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover RCT comparing single-dose MPH, ATX, and placebo | Task-related brain activation, assessed on and off single doses of MPH and ATX | During sustained attention, both drugs enhanced activation of right middle/superior temporal cortex, PCC, and precuneus relative to placebo. Only MPH upregulated left IFG/superior temporal lobe activation. |
| Liddle et al. [ | UK | 18 (all undergoing MPH treatment) | 18 | Not reported (9- to 15-year-old range) | Not reported | Not reported | Non-blinded study of chronically medicated MPH responders with ADHD, in which subjects were scanned on and off MPH | Default mode deactivation on and off MPH, assessed during a go/no-go task | MPH normalized default mode deactivation relative to controls. |
| Lin and Gau [ | Taiwan | 24 (all medication naïve) | 24 | 46% | Not reported | 8-week double-blind randomized controlled trial comparing ATX against placebo | Changes in resting-state connectivity of key nodes of default mode, affective, dorsal attention, ventral attention, and cognitive control networks | ATX-related improvements in ADHD symptoms were related to pre- to post-treatment changes in functional connectivity, predominantly involving inferior frontal and temporo-parietal regions. | |
| Mizuno et al. [ | Japan | 27 (all medication-free for >5 times medication half-lives) | 49 | 100% | Not reported | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover RCT comparing single-dose MPH, and placebo | Dynamic resting-state functional connectivity | Abnormalities in time-varying connectivity observed under placebo were remediated by MPH. | |
| Peterson et al. [ | USA | 16 (all MPH responders) | 20 | 69% | 94% | Non-blinded study of chronically medicated psychostimulant responders with ADHD, in which subject were scanned on and off MPH | Brain activation was assessed during a stop task both on and off medication | MPH improved deactivation of default mode network in the ADHD group during the stop task. | |
| Rubia et al. [ | UK | 12 (all medication naïve) | 12 | 100% | Not reported | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover RCT comparing single-dose MPH, and placebo | Task-related brain activation, assessed on and off single doses of MPH | During time discrimination, left IFG/insula and dACC were upregulated by MPH. | |
| Rubia et al. [ | UK | 13 (all medication naïve) | 13 | 100% | Not reported | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover RCT comparing single-dose MPH, and placebo | Task-related brain activation, assessed on and off single doses of MPH | MPH upregulated right IFG during sustained attention and vmPFC and caudate during rewarded processing. | |
| Rubia et al. [ | UK | 12 (all medication naïve) | 13 | 100% | Not reported | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover RCT comparing single-dose MPH, and placebo | Task-related brain activation, assessed on and off single doses of MPH | MPH upregulated right IFG and premotor cortices during the Simon task. | |
| Rubia et al. [ | UK | 12 (all medication naïve) | 13 | 100% | Not reported | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover RCT comparing single-dose MPH and placebo | Task-related brain activation, assessed on and off single doses of MPH | During error trials on stop task, MPH upregulated bilateral IFG/insula/putamen/caudate and left DLPFC. | |
| Rubia et al. [ | UK | 31 (24 receiving stable medication) | 0 | 100% | Not reported | 2-week real-time fMRI neurofeedback of the right IFG vs. a control para-hippocampal region. Single-blind RCT. | Changes in functional connectivity assessed during transfer session | Changes in IFG connectivity were specific to the right IFG training group, and correlated with clinical improvements assessed using the CPRS‐R ADHD index scale. | |
| Schrantee et al. [ | Netherlands | 40 children + 48 adults (all medication naïve) | 0 | Children: 11.5 (0.8); adults: 28.6 (4.6) | 100% | Not reported | Subjects scanned before and after a single-dose of MPH | ASL | MPH was associated with reduction widespread cortical CBF reductions in children and adults. CBF reductions within the thalamus were observed only in children. |
| Shang et al. [ | Taiwan | 38 (all medication naïve) | 0 | 10.5 (2.4) | 83% | Not reported | 12-week open-label RCT of MPH and ATX | fALFF | Pre- to post-treatment increases in fALFF in the left superior temporal gyrus and left inferior parietal lobule (MPH) and in the left lingual gyrus and left inferior occipital gyrus (ATX) were associated with changes in inattention symptoms. Changes in hyperactivity/impulsivity symptoms were associated with increases in fALFF in the MPH group but decreases in fALFF in the ATX group. |
| Schulz et al. [ | USA | 36 (13 medication naïve, 8 medicated at enrollment prior to washout) | 0 | 11.2 2.71 | 83% | Not reported | 6 to 8-week MPH and ATX double-blind parallel groups RCT | Brain activation during go/no-go task | Improvement in ADHD symptoms under both drugs was associated with decreased bilateral motor cortex activation. Symptomatic improvement was also related to increased activation following treatment for ATX in right IFG, left ACC, and bilateral posterior cingulate cortex, but decreases in activation in the MPH group. |
| Silk et al. [ | Australia | 16 (10 medication naïve, 6 withdrawn from meds for 48 hours) | 15 | M = 13.37 Range = 12.13 to 15.80 | 100% | Not reported | Double-blind cross-over RCT comparing single doses of MPH, and placebo | Whole-brain resting-state connectivity | MPH was associated with widespread decreases in functional connectivity involving occipital, temporal and subcortical regions. |
| Smith et al. [ | UK | 20 (all medication naïve) | 20 | Range = 10–17 years old | 100% | Not reported | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover RCT comparing single-dose MPH, ATX and placebo. | Task-related brain activation, assessed on and off single doses of MPH and ATX | Both medications, upregulated right IFG/insula activation during time discrimination. No differences were observed between drugs. |
| van Elst et al. [ | Germany | 131 at baseline (98 had follow-up data) | 0 | M = 35.40, SD = 9.8 | 52% | 99% | 12-month placebo-controlled RCT of MPH versus placebo | Gray matter volume | MPH was not associated with any significant changes in gray matter volume. Non-significant trends were detected in the cerebellum, which showed increases over time in the MPH group only. |
| Wang et al. [ | USA | 49 (all medication naïve or medication free for >4 months for children or 12 months for adults) | 46 | M = 13.52 SD = 5.51 | 62.1% | Not reported | 12-week, placebo-controlled RCT of LDEX versus placebo | Dynamic resting-state functional connectivity | LDEX increased static and decreased dynamic FC. However, decreases in dynamic functional connectivity were associated with the therapeutic effects of LDEX. |
| Yang et al. [ | USA | 19 | 0 | 34.3 (9.3) | 68.75% | Not reported | 3-week RCT of amphetamine-based stimulant medications | Whole-brain resting-state connectivity | Reductions in connectivity between left DLPFC and bilateral ACC and right insula tracked treatment-related improvement in hyperactive/impulsive symptoms, while reductions in connectivity between bilateral medial frontal and left insula were associated with greater overall improvements in ADHD symptoms. |
| Yoo et al. [ | South Korea | 20 (all medication-naïve) | 27 | 10.09 (2.5) | 74.47% | Not reported | 12-week MPH, open label | ALFF, fALFF, resting-state connectivity assessed using ICA dual regression and graph theory measures of resting-state connectivity | Changes in resting-state connectivity and ALFF could explain the 27.1% variance of symptom improvement measured by the K-ARS total score. The strongest predictor was ALFF within bilateral superior parietal lobe. |
ACC anterior cingulate cortex, ADHD attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, ADHD-RS-IV ADHD Rating Scale-IV, ALFF amplitude of low-frequency fluctuation, ASL Arterial spin labeling, ATX atomoxetine, CPRS-r Conners’ Parent Rating Scale-revised, dACC dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, DICA-IV Diagnostic Interview for Children and Adolescents – IV, DLPFC dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, fALFF fractional amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations, fMRI; functional magnetic resonance imaging, IFG inferior prefrontal gyrus; ICA independent component analysis, K-ARS Korean ADHD Rating Scale, LDEX lisdexamfetamine, MPH methylphenidate; MRI magnetic resonance imaging, PCC posterior cingulate cortex, RCT randomized controlled trial, ReHo regional homogeneity, vmPFC ventromedial prefrontal cortex.
Details of EEG studies of candidate monitoring/response biomarkers.
| Authors, year | Country | N ADHD | N Control | Age | % Male | % White | Design | Candidate biomarker(s) | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aggensteiner et al. [ | Germany | 103 (77 at follow-up) | 0 | 85% | Not reported | 3-month slow cortical potential-NF vs. semi-active control (electromyogram biofeedback) RCT | Cue P3 and contingent negative variation during cued go/no-go task | Attentional (cue P3) and preparatory (contingent negative variation) brain activity and performance non-specifically reduced after treatment. Contingent negative variation in the slow cortical potential-NF group increased with clinical improvement. | |
| Aldemir et al. [ | Turkey | 20 (all medication free) | 20 | Not reported | Not reported | 3-month MPH vs. ATX | Power across frequency bands during rest | Similar effects of MPH and ATX on EEG power across frequency bands in the ADHD group, especially at frontal and temporal regions. | |
| Barry et al. [ | Australia | 50 (all medication naïve) | 50 | 64% | Not reported | Single dose ATX | Beta power during rest | ATX increased absolute and relative beta power and produced topographic changes in other bands in the ADHD group. | |
| Bresnahan et al. [ | Australia | 50 (DEX responders) | 50 | 50% | Not reported | 4-week DEX, open label | Delta and theta power during rest | Significant reduction in absolute delta, absolute and relative theta, and total power in the ADHD group to levels similar to controls. | |
| Chiarenza et al. [ | Italy | 61 (all medication free for >5 times half-lives) | Not reported (reference database) | 85% | Not reported | 12-month ATX, open label | Absolute power across frequency bands during rest | Treatment-related reductions of absolute power in all frequencies over frontal, central and temporal regions in responders, becoming similar to controls. Non-significant changes in non-responders. | |
| Clarke et al. [ | Not reported (probably Australia) | 50 (all medication naïve or medication free for >5 times half-lives) | 40 | Range = 8–13 | 100% | Not reported | 6-month MPH or DEX, open label | Theta and beta power, TBR during rest | MPH/DEX increased beta power and reduced theta power and TBR in ADHD group, to levels similar to controls. |
| Clarke et al. [ | Not reported (probably Australia) | 20 (all inattentive type, medication naïve or medication free for >5 times half-lives) | 10 | Range = 8–13 | 100% | Not reported | 6-month MPH or DEX, open label | Theta, alpha, beta power, theta/alpha ratio during rest | MPH/DEX increased alpha and beta power and reduced theta power and theta/alpha ratio in inattentive ADHD group, to levels similar to controls. |
| Groom et al. [ | UK | 28 (all combined type, MPH responders) | 28 | 96% | Not reported | Single dose MPH | N2 and P3 amplitudes during go/no-go task | MPH increased N2 and P3 amplitudes in the ADHD group. | |
| Groom et al. [ | UK | 28 (all combined type, MPH responders) | 28 | 96% | Not reported | Single dose MPH | ERN and Pe during go/no-go task | MPH increased ERN and Pe amplitudes in the ADHD group. | |
| Hermens et al. [ | Australia | 34 (16 medication naïve, 18 MPH free for >2 weeks) | 34 | 82% | Not reported | 4-week MPH, open label | Theta power, P3 during oddball task | MPH reduced theta power and increased P3 amplitude in the ADHD group, to levels similar to controls. | |
| Isiten et al. [ | Turkey | 43 (all drug naïve) | 0 | 77% | Not reported | 1.5-year MPH, open label | Beta power during rest | MPH decreased TBR and increased beta power; no effect on theta power. | |
| Janssen et al. [ | Netherlands | 112 (all medication free for >1 month) | 0 | 75% | Not reported | 10-week MPH vs. NF vs. physical activity RCT | Theta power during rest and stop signal task | MPH reduced theta power during rest and task more than physical activity. NF reduced theta power during rest more than physical activity. Greater NF-related theta reductions correlated with symptom improvement. | |
| Janssen et al., 2016b [ | Netherlands | 112 (all medication free for >1 month) | 0 | 75% | Not reported | 10-week MPH vs, NF vs. physical activity RCT | P3 amplitude during stop signal task | MPH increased P3 amplitude more than NF and physical activity. Stimulant-related P3 effects were localized in the thalamus and striatum. | |
| Kratz et al. [ | Germany | 23 (all medication naïve) | 0 | 79% | Not reported | 8-week MPH vs. ATX, cross-over | Contingent negative variation amplitude during attention network test | MPH but not ATX increased contingent negative variation amplitudes. | |
| Loo et al. [ | USA | 10 (all MPH free for 48 hours) | 0 | 80% | Not reported | Single dose MPH vs. placebo, cross-over | Power across frequency bands during rest and CPT | MPH reduced theta and alpha power and increased beta power in responders, with opposite effects in non-responders. | |
| Loo et al. 2004 [ | USA | 36 | 0 | 72% | Not reported | Single dose MPH vs. placebo, cross-over | Power across frequency bands during rest and CPT | MPH increased beta power in responders, with opposite effects in non-responders. | |
| Loo et al. [ | USA | 207 (all medication naïve or medication free for >5 times half-lives) | 0 | 68% | 83% | 8-week MPH, GUAN, MPH + GUAN, RCT | Power across frequency bands during rest | GUAN decreased global alpha power, MPH and MPH + GUAN increased centro-parietal beta power, and MPH + GUAN decreased theta power. Medication-related changes in theta power correlated with behavioral and cognitive improvements. | |
| Lubar et al. [ | USA | 23 (all MPH free for 48 hours) | Not reported (reference database) | Range = 9–11 | 100% | Not reported | Single dose MPH vs. placebo, cross-over | Coherence, phase and asymmetry during rest | MPH ameliorated atypical EEG coherence, phase and asymmetry patterns in the ADHD group, to levels similar to the reference group. |
| Luo et al. [ | China | 121 | 0 | 83% | Not reported | 3-month remote computerized cognitive, NF, and combined training, RCT | Alpha power during rest | All 3 treatments increased relative alpha power. Pre-training inattention scores corelated negatively with change in relative alpha. | |
| McGough et al. [ | USA | 62 (medication free for >1 month) | 0 | 65% | 65% | 4-week active vs. sham TNS, RCT | Power in delta, theta, beta, gamma frequency bands during rest | TNS increased right-frontal (delta, theta, beta, and gamma) and mid-frontal (gamma) power. | |
| Michelini et al. [ | USA | 207 (all medication naïve or medication free for >5 times half-lives) | 0 | 68% | 83% | 8-week MPH, GUAN, MPH + GUAN, RCT | Event-related mid-occipital power during a Sternberg spatial working memory task with encoding, maintenance and retrieval phases | MPH + GUAN decreased midoccipital theta, alpha and beta across task phases, with significantly greater changes than monotherapies. MPH increased midoccipital theta during retrieval. GUAN produced trend-level reductions in midoccipital alpha during maintenance and retrieval. Treatment-related changes in midoccipital power correlated with ADHD improvements. | |
| Skirrow et al. [ | UK | 41 (all medication free for >1 month [stimulants]) or 6 months [other medication]) | 48 | 100% | Not reported | 3.5-month MPH, open label | Theta power during rest, CPT and sustained attention to response task | MPH normalized in the ADHD group the increase in theta power between rest and task conditions displayed by controls. | |
| Song et al. [ | South Korea | 24 | 0 | 100% | Not reported | Single dose MPH | Power across frequency bands and TBR during CPT | MPH increased alpha and beta power, decreased theta and delta power, and increased TBR during CPT. No effects during rest. | |
| Verbaten et al. [ | Netherlands | 12 | 0 | 83% | Not reported | Single dose MPH vs. placebo, RCT | P3 and N2 amplitudes during CPT | MPH increased parietal P3 and frontal N2 amplitudes to targets and non-targets. |
ADHD attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, ATX atomoxetine, CPT continuous performance test, EEG electroencephalography, DEX dexamphetamine, ERP event relate potential, GUAN guanfacine, MPH methylphenidate, iAPF individual alpha peak frequency; M mean age, NF neurofeedback, RCT randomized controlled trial; SD standard deviation, TBR theta/beta ratio, TNS trigeminal nerve stimulation.