| Literature DB >> 36232180 |
Alma Y Galvez-Contreras1, Ivette Vargas-de la Cruz1, Beatriz Beltran-Navarro1, Rocio E Gonzalez-Castaneda2, Oscar Gonzalez-Perez3.
Abstract
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder is a neurodevelopmental disorder with three presentations: inattentive, hyperactive/impulsive and combined. These may represent an independent disease entity. Therefore, the therapeutic approach must be focused on their neurobiological, psychological and social characteristics. To date, there is no comprehensive analysis of the efficacy of different treatments for each presentation of ADHD and each stage of development. This is as narrative overview of scientific papers that summarize the most recent findings and identify the most effective pharmacological and psychosocial treatments by ADHD presentation and age range. Evidence suggests that methylphenidate is the safest and most effective drug for the clinical management of children, adolescents and adults. Atomoxetine is effective in preschoolers and maintains similar efficacy to methylphenidate in adults, whereas guanfacine has proven to be an effective monotherapy for adults and is a worthy adjuvant for the management of cognitive symptoms. The psychosocial treatments with the best results in preschoolers are behavioral interventions that include training of primary caregivers. In adolescents, the combination of cognitive and cognitive-behavioral therapies has shown the best results, whereas cognitive-behavioral interventions are the most effective in adults. Pharmacological and psychosocial treatments must be adjusted to the ADHD presentation and its neurocognitive characteristics through the patient's development.Entities:
Keywords: DSM-5; attention; hyperactivity; impulsiveness; neurodevelopmental disorders; neuropsychology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36232180 PMCID: PMC9566361 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph191912880
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Behavioral Expression of ADHD Subtypes.
| Presentations/Subtypes of ADHD | Behavioral Expression |
|---|---|
|
| Do not pay attention to the details of their tasks. Make careless mistakes on homework. Have difficulty for maintaining attention to tasks or games. Seem not to hear when spoken to directly. Do not follow instructions. Do not complete schoolwork, errands or obligations. Have difficulties in organizing activities. Avoid or dislike engaging in tasks that require effort. Lose supplies or things necessary to perform activities. Easily distracted by irrelevant stimuli. Careless in daily activities. |
|
| Hyperactivity |
|
Move hands or feet excessively or restless when seated. Cannot remain seated when they must be seated. Run or jump excessively in situations or places where it is inappropriate. Have trouble relaxing or playing games when it is necessary to stay still. Keep permanently in motion. Excessive talking | |
| Impulsive | |
|
Answer or react before questions are finished. Have difficulty queuing or waiting turns at games. Constantly interrupt conversations, games or activities. | |
|
|
Show same number of inattentive and hyperactivity/impulsivity behaviors |
Typical behaviors by subtype or presentation of ADHD according to DSM-5 criteria.
Figure 1Methodological process for references selection. Description of the steps performed for the search and selection of references used for this review.
A summary of the main findings of each reference examined for this review.
| Reference | Authors | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | APA | Report the diagnostic criteria for ADHD |
| 2 | National Institutes of Health Consensus Development Conference Statement | ADHD as a public health problem |
| 3 | Andersen, 2003 | 60% of the ADHD cases diagnosed in childhood can persist until adulthood |
| 4 | Mowlem et al., 2018 | Percentage of diagnosis for each presentation in ADHD: inattention: 53.7%, combined type 26.8% and hyperactive/impulsive 19.5% |
| 5 | Willcutt et al., 2012 | The most diagnosed presentation |
| 6 | Greenhill et al., 2008 | The most diagnosed presentation |
| 7 | Young et al., 2013 | The inattention presentation of ADHD is the most common clinical feature for adults. |
| 8 | Lahey et al., 2005 | Dynamics in the diagnostic of each ADHD presentation throughout development. |
| 9 | Charach et al., 2011 | Diagnosis of ADHD by age |
| 10 | Chronis et al., 2006 | Importance of multimodal treatments for ADHD. |
| 11 | Hébert et al., 2013 | Clinical issues that affect the therapy adherence in ADHD patients. |
| 12 | Barbaresi et al., 2007 | Stimulant drugs improve reading, grade retention and school attendance |
| 13 | Caye et al., 2019 | The safety of ADHD treatments should be evaluated according to individualized patients’ features. |
| 14 | Minzenberg et al., 2012 | Subcellular mechanisms of pharmacological treatments in ADHD could be related to neural or cognition systems. |
| 15 | Cortese et al., 2020 | The efficacy of pharmacological treatments that have been approved by regulatory agencies. |
| 16 | Liu et al., 2017 | Methylphenidate shows higher response, decreases inattention and generates lower risk for adverse events as compared to Atomoxetine in children and adolescents |
| 17 | Stuhec et al., 2019 | Stimulant drugs with larger size effect for ADHD treatment in adults. |
| 18 | Storebø et al., 2019 | Parallel and crossover trials are suitable for analyzing the efficacy of methylphenidate in children and adolescents with ADHD. |
| 19 | Wilens et al., 2008 | Role of catecholaminergic systems in the improvement of core symptoms in ADHD. |
| 20 | Huang et al., 2011 | Long-term efficacy of pharmacological treatments in comparison to their adverse effects. |
| 21 | Mardomingo-Sanz et al., 2012 | Effectiveness of different formulations of methylphenidate. |
| 22 | Zetterström et al., 2019 | Methylphenidate efficacy depends on the duration of its administration and the brain region analyzed. |
| 23 | Pietrzak et al., 2006 | Intra- or inter-individual variability may affect the methylphenidate efficacy. |
| 24 | Zehle et al., 2007 | Indicates that methylphenidate could improve the core ADHD symptoms via increasing the synaptic organization. |
| 25 | Kodama et al., 2017 | Methylphenidate effects on the dopamine system are brain-region dependent. |
| 26 | Schulz et al., 2017 | Methylphenidate is better than atomoxetine for activating the caudate nucleus of young ADHD patients. |
| 27 | Nakanishi et al., 2017 | Effects of methylphenidate and atomoxetine in the prefrontal activity of children with ADHD. |
| 28 | Ozdemir, et al., 2010 | Risk of methylphenidate for developing suicide behavior. |
| 29 | Patel et al., 2017 | Effects of toxic doses of psychostimulants over psychotic symptoms. |
| 30 | Cheng et al., 2014 | Low doses of methylphenidate improve cognition by increasing excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs), whereas high doses are related to psychosis because of EPSC blockage. |
| 31 | Huss et al., 2017 | Dose optimization of methylphenidate improves the efficacy of this treatment |
| 32 | Beyer, et al., 2014 | Methylphenidate as a cognitive enhancer in healthy people. |
| 33 | Kortekaas-Rijlaarsdam et al., 2017 | The efficacy of methylphenidate on academic performance could be limited to math abilities. |
| 34 | Masi et al., 2017 | Effectiveness of methylphenidate in aggressive behavior in ADHD plus ODD or Aggression. |
| 35 | Golubchik et al.,2019 | Effectiveness of methylphenidate againts impulsive behavior in ADHD and ADHD plus ODD patients |
| 36 | Reynaud et al., 2019 | Atomoxetine injections improves attentional orientation. |
| 37 | Clemow et al., 2016 | Optimal doses of atomoxetine by age. |
| 38 | Rezaei et al., 2016 | In children and adolescents, atomoxetine has similar size effect to methylphenidate with immediate-release vehicle, but not with the osmotic vehicles. |
| 39 | Verplaetse et al., 2019 | Guanfacine as adjuvant therapy for ADHD in children and adolescents. |
| 40 | Iwanami et al., 2020 | Guanfacine for the treatment of ADHD in adults. |
| 41 | Okazaki et al., 2019 | Guanfacine is effective and well tolerated when compared to atomoxetine and methylphenidate. |
| 42 | Okada et al., 2019 | Guanfacine reduces impulsivity. |
| 43 | Fitzpatrick et al., 2019 | Guanfacine improves cognitive performance in ADHD. |
| 44 | Cortese et al., 2018 | Atomoxetine is less effective for ADHD symptoms in late childhood |
| 45 | Bastiaens et al., 2019 | Methylphenidate is not recommended for ADHD patients with drug addictions. |
| 46 | Pievsky et al., 2018 | ADHD patients present worse neurocognitive performance as compared to neurotypical subjects. |
| 47 | Mohammadi et al., 2014 | Decision-making problems in ADHD patients. |
| 48 | Barkley et al., 1997 | A theoretical model which suggests that ADHD should be associated with deficits in inhibition, working memory, self-regulation and internalization of speech. |
| 49 | Castellanos et al., 2002 | Executive problems in ADHD patients. |
| 50 | Diamond et al., 2005 | Working memory is the main difficulty in the inattentive type of ADHD. |
| 51 | Biederman et al., 1991 | ADHD in children should be categorized by comorbidity. |
| 52 | Daley et al., 2010 | The core symptoms of ADHD and not the comorbid symptoms, underlaying poor academic performance. |
| 53 | Shuai et al., 2017 | Training in executive functions improve daily activities in children with ADHD. |
| 54 | Bahcivan et al., 2015 | Patients with inattentive-ADHD require executive skills training. |
| 55 | Cortese et al., 2015 | Cognitive training improves working memory performance on children/adolescents with ADHD. |
| 56 | Chan et al., 2016 | Pharmacological treatments improve the core symptoms whereas psychosocial treatments enhance academic and organizational skills in adolescents with ADHD. |
| 57 | Fabiano et al., 2015 | Methodological issues found in some reports that analyze the efficacy of psychosocial treatments |
| 58 | Bikic et al., 2017 | Organizational skill training improves the symptoms of ADHD In children, |
| 59 | Serrano-Troncoso et al., 2013 | Psychosocial strategies show efficacy for ADHD clinical management. |
| 60 | Sibley et al., 2014 | In adolescents with ADHD, behavioral therapy showed similar improvements to pharmacological approaches. |
| 61 | Burke et al., 2002 | Types of psychosocial treatments. |
| 62 | Connor et al., 2002 | Types of psychosocial treatments |
| 63 | Pelham, et al., 2008 | Types of psychosocial treatments |
| 64 | Evans et al., 2014 | Cognitive interventions show moderate size effect in children and adolescents. |
| 65 | Nakashima et al., 2021 | Cognitive interventions during adulthood improve the clinical presentation of ADHD. |
| 66 | Vidal et al., 2015 | Inattention symptoms improve with therapy in groups. |
| 67 | Faraone et al., 1998 | Anxiety and depression are the most common comorbid problems with ADHD. |
| 68 | Mayes et al., 2009 | Anxiety and depression are the most common comorbid problems with ADHD. |
| 69 | Milich et al., 2001 | Anxiety and depression are the most common comorbid problems with ADHD. |
| 70 | Power et al., 2004 | Anxiety and depression are the most common comorbid problems in children with ADHD. |
| 71 | Presentación & Siegenthaler, 2005 | Anxiety and depression are comorbid with ADHD throughout development. |
| 72 | Van Den Hoofdakker et al., 2007 | Behavioral training for parents improves the symptoms of anxiety and depression in ADHD. |
| 73 | Vidal Estrada et al., 2012 | Cognitive- behavioral training improves self-esteem in ADHD patients. |
| 74 | Fullen et al., 2020 | Acceptance and commitment therapy is an emerging treatment that reduces anxiety in adults with ADHD. |
| 75 | Gadow et al., 2004 | Oppositional-defiant disorder is comorbid with ADHD |
| 76 | Nolan et al., 1999 | Oppositional-defiant disorder are comorbid with ADHD |
| 77 | Díaz Atienza, 2006 | Oppositional-defiant disorder is characterized by the exteriorization of disruptive behaviors and behavioral alterations. |
| 78 | Deault, 2010 | Oppositional-defiant disorder generates social dysfunction. |
Description of the main findings examined in this review.
Clinical efficacy of the pharmacology therapy for controlling ADHD symptoms throughout development.
| Drug | Clinical Efficacy | Developmental Stage |
|---|---|---|
| MPH | Inattention, impulsivity and hyperactivity. | Children and adolescents |
| MPH | Math skills | Children and adolescents |
| MPH | Motivation | Children and adolescents |
| MPH | Verbal fluency, selective attention, inhibitory control, spatial intelligence and working memory | Children and adolescents |
| MPH | Academic performance | Children |
| MPH | Control incidence and severity of ODD assaults | Young |
| ATM | Hyperactive/impulsive | Preschool child |
| Guanfacine | Cognitive performance, attention deficit, hyperactivity and working memory | Children, adolescents and adults |
Main effects of pharmacological therapy in ADHD.
Neuropsychological Treatments Evidence in ADHD.
| Cognitive Training | Efficacy on Symptoms | Developmental Stage |
|---|---|---|
| Executive training | Executive skills and improve routines in real daily life | Children |
| Cognitive training | Improve deficits in visual and verbal working memory | Children |
Psychosocial Treatments Evidence in ADHD.
| Psychosocial Managements | Externalizing Symptoms | Internalizing Symptoms | Inattention | Impulsivity | Hyperactivity | Development Stage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Behavioral therapy | − | + | − | − | − | Children |
| Behavioral parenting training | − | + | + | + | + | Children and adolescents |
| Cognitive interventions | − | − | + | − | − | Children, adolescents and adults |
| Cognitive/behavioral therapy | − | + | − | − | − | Adults |
| Cognitive therapy for groups | − | − | + | − | − | Adults |
| Organization training | − | − | + | − | − | Children and adolescents |
Psychosocial treatments utilized in ADHD patients and their efficacy by predominant symptoms: internalizing (depression, anxiety and somatic disorders), externalizing (oppositional, antisocial, etc.) and central (inattention, hyperactivity and impulsivity). Effective (+) and not effective (−).
Recommended Behavioral Therapeutic Approaches for ADHD by Developmental Stage and Clinical Presentation.
| Stage of Development | ADHD Innatentive | ADHD Combined |
|---|---|---|
| Childhood and adolescence | Behavioral training for parents. | Behavioral training for parents. |
| Training in organization of school supplies. | Training in organization of school supplies. | |
| Cognitive intervention. | Cognitive intervention. | |
| Behavioral management in classroom. | Behavioral management in classroom. | |
| Peer behavioral intervention. | Peer behavioral intervention. | |
| Organizational skills training. | Organizational skills training. | |
| Combination of behavioral treatments for parents and teachers. | Combination of behavioral treatments for parents and teachers. | |
| Strategies for contingency management and academic interventions. | ||
| Adulthood | Cognitive behavioral therapy. | Cognitive behavioral therapy. |
| Cognitive training. | Cognitive training. | |
| Metacognitive therapy. | Metacognitive therapy. | |
| Cognitive behavioral therapy. | Cognitive behavioral therapy. | |
| Cognitive rehabilitation. | Cognitive rehabilitation. |
Psychosocial treatments by developmental stage and subtype/presentation of ADHD.
Figure 2Recommended Behavioral and Pharmacological Approaches for ADHD by Developmental Stage and Clinical Presentation.