Attention Deficit Disorder With Hyperactivity Clinical Trial
Official title:
Early Interventions in Children With Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: Randomized Controlled Trial Comparing Methylphenidate Parental Training in Treating Preschool Children With Attention Deficit / Hyperactivity Disorder
Introduction: Attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is one of the most prevalent
mental disorders in children and is associated with important negative functional outcomes
throughout development. The first signs and symptoms become apparent in preschool age.
Therefore, early interventions in this population have the potential of limiting the
disorder's negative impact and preventing future impairments in affected individuals. The
first-choice medication for treating ADHD is methylphenidate, which has evidence of efficacy
and safety in preschool children. However, non-evidence based worries and pressure from the
media placed parent training as the first-line treatment for ADHD in clinical guidelines.
Parent training is a behavioral intervention implemented with the parents, with weekly
sessions for 8 weeks, adequate for treating ADHD dysfunctional symptoms and behaviors.
However, the level of evidence for this intervention is reduced. Furthermore, the need of
trained therapists in the public health system, added to the difficulties on adherence and
comprehension from parents, limit its generalization and raise questions regarding its
indications. Until now, no study has compared pharmacological treatment with methylphenidate
to parent training in preschool children with ADHD regarding their clinical efficacy and
cost-effectiveness. Moreover, no study has evaluated the impact of pharmacological
intervention and psychotherapy on neurobiological mechanisms of ADHD, which is crucial for
determining their impact on neurodevelopment.
Objectives: This is a double-blind randomized clinical trial that aims to evaluate the
efficacy, tolerability, and acceptability of treatment with methylphenidate compared to
parental training and placebo in preschool children with ADHD.
Methods: This study will be a randomized, double-blind, parallel-group, evaluating two active
interventions and placebo control group. One hundred and fifty children aged 3 years and 11
months and 5 years and 11 months, diagnosed with ADHD, will be randomized to receive
treatment with methylphenidate and information (50 children), parental training and treatment
with placebo medication (50 children) or belong to active control group with educational
information for parents and placebo treatment with no treatment (active control, 50
children). The treatment will last eight weeks, the neurobiological outcomes will be assessed
before and after treatment and clinical outcomes will be assessed at weeks 0, 5 and 9. After
the end of treatment, all participants will be invited to participate in a 3 years' annual
follow-up. 50 children with typical development will also be evaluated in relation to
neurobiological measures.
Implications: This study proposes an innovative and relevant analysis, which will enable the
field to advance the knowledge of biological mechanisms related to ADHD and to treatment
response. Also, the study will expand the evidence to guide early prevention strategies and
early intervention.
The recruitment of participants will be performed through social media divulgation, on our
official website and through contact with preschools in the city of Sao Paulo. The
participants that have been selected on the telephonic pre-screening are called for a
diagnostic evaluation and an eligibility criteria verification performed by a child and
adolescence psychiatrist and neuropsychologists. The psychiatric care and the outcomes
evaluation sessions will be conducted by trained professionals, under the principal
investigator's supervision.
The children will be randomized using the website randomization.com to one of the three
groups: drug treatment with methylphenidate and educational information, parental training
and placebo medication, or active control group with educational information and placebo
medication. After the eight-week intervention, the participants can receive treatments not
previously offered according to a clinical decision.
All selected participants for the clinical trial will be evaluated and accompanied by a child
and adolescent psychiatrist before the study and bi-weekly until its completion. Furthermore,
a blind evaluator will be responsible for the outcomes measures evaluation.
The clinical evaluator (child and adolescent psychiatrist) and the research assistant
responsible for the questionnaires application will be blind towards the modality of
treatment that the participant undergoes.
All of the study's evaluation protocol and monitoring is done on the platform Research
Electronic Data Capture - REDCap, a software developed by Vanderbilt University - Tennessee,
which is hosted in The Clinics Hospital of the University of São Paulo Medical School server.
REDCap presents three main functions: a) electronic data collection; b) data management; c)
study flow management. This data bank complies with the international policies of data's
privacy and security on health area. In addition to the collection and storage structure,
validation, auditing and data exporting tools of the system itself are also used.
The efficacy analysis will be made from treatment intention (data from all randomized
patients will be included in the analysis). The outcomes (clinical measures of efficacy and
tolerability) will be analyzed through mixed effects analyses, with individual models for
each outcome. This model assumes that missing data occurs at random and avoids potential
biases associated with the analysis only of the individuals who completed the observations or
using the strategy to carry the last observation made. The model will include fixed effects
for treatment (three levels), time (0, 5 and 9 weeks), time-treatment interaction and
randomization effect for the participants. Effect sizes will be calculated by subtracting of
the modification of each of the outcomes between the patients in the active groups versus
active group control, and between both active treatments, divided by the standard deviation
of the entire sample.
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