Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT00917371 |
Other study ID # |
200903059M |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
August 2010 |
Est. completion date |
July 31, 2011 |
Study information
Verified date |
November 2010 |
Source |
National Taiwan University Hospital |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has been recognized as a common (5-8%),
early-onset, long-term impairing, heterogeneous neuropsychiatric disorder with high
heritability. Pharmacotherapy (methylphenidate and atomoxetine) has been proved to be the
most effective treatment for ADHD. Gau (PI) has done extensive research on ADHD and published
7 SCI papers in ADHD pharmacotherapy. The PI published the first paper in the effectiveness
of atomoxetine in improving executive functions among 30 boys with ADHD in the world
(International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology, 2009 Oct 23:1-14. [Epub]). Due to its
lifelong impairments up to adulthood, adult ADHD has drawn much more attention in Western
studies in the past decade; however, there is lack of such information in Asian population
except the PI's three SCI papers on adult ADHD. Because little is known about atomoxetine
effect in adults with ADHD except symptoms reduction, this proposal aims to investigate the
efficacy of atomoxetine beyond symptoms improvement. The significance of this project is its
novelty and research and clinical relevance because there is lack of information regarding
long-term effect of atomoxetine on neuropsychological and brain imaging functions on adults
with ADHD, a high-prevalent mental disorder with long-term impairment in adults.
Description:
Specific Aims:
1. To examine the efficacy of atomoxetine in improving neuropsychological functioning
(CANTAB, Time Perception Tasks) and structural (DSI) and functional (resting fMRI) brain
connectivity as the primary efficacy endpoints.
2. To examine the efficacy of atomoxetine in reducing ADHD core symptoms and in improving
family/social/academic/occupational adjustment and quality of life.
The study design is a randomized open-label, methylphenidate control trial. The sample
consists of 60 adults, aged 18-50, with clinical diagnosis of DSM-IV. All participants will
be randomly assigned to atomoxetine (n= 30), methylphenidate (n= 15), and clinical visit with
psychological counseling (n=15) in a 8-week randomized clinical trial with 3 treatment arms.
The measures included psychiatric interviews (ADHD+SADS), the CGI-ADHD-S, the standardized
self-reported questionnaires (the AAQoL, WFIRS-S, and WFIRS-P for social function; ASRS for
ADHD symptoms), neuropsychological tests (CANTAB including attention tasks, visual memory,
executive functioning, and gambling test; Time Perception Task), and brain imaging (DSI and
resting fMRI).
They will be reassessed with safety, ADHD symptoms and social functioning/quality of life at
baseline, week 2 (± 5 days), week 4 (± 5 days), and week 8 (± 5 days); neuropsychological
tests at baseline, week 4 (± 5 days), and week 8 (± 5 days); and brain imaging studies (DSI
and resting-fMRI) at baseline and week 8 (± 5 days). Additionally, blood sample will be
collected at baseline for future pharmacogenomic study.
We anticipate that this study will be one of the first to investigate the efficacy of
atomoxetine on neuropsychological functioning, and structural and functional brain
connectivity in the world. If this research can be carried out, it will be the first project
using brain images as assessment tools in a clinical trial among psychiatric patients in
psychiatric field in Taiwan.