Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Pilot Study Designed To Improve Sleep and Subsequent Daytime Functioning in Children Diagnosed With ADHD
This study will test the efficacy of a systematic, multi-modal intervention protocol designed to improve sleep functioning and subsequent alleviation of daytime cognitive and behavioral difficulties among children diagnosed with ADHD. It is hypothesized that children receiving behavioral and (if necessary) pharmacologic interventions targeting sleep will display improvement on objective and subjective sleep measures, neuropsychological tests, and teacher-, and parent-ratings of ADHD behaviors.
Parents, researchers, and clinicians have long suspected that inadequate sleep in many
children diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) can exacerbate
symptoms of hyperactivity and inattentiveness, leading to further cognitive and behavioral
disruptions. Extant sleep studies report that upwards of 50% of children diagnosed with ADHD
display behaviors associated with chronic sleep disruption (in comparison to non-diagnosed
youth). Although studies have attempted to alleviate sleep difficulties, most intervention
studies have used only one treatment modality. This study will incorporate a systematic,
multi-method treatment intervention protocol that will combine behavioral and pharmacologic
strategies aimed to improve sleep functioning among children with ADHD.
The specific aims of this study are to (a) examine the effects of a structured sleep
behavioral/pharmacologic intervention protocol on improved sleep onset and efficiency, and
(b) examine how such improvements may alleviate daytime neuropsychological (i.e., response
time) and behavioral deficits associated with ADHD. The study will take place at the ADHD
Clinic. Twelve children (ages 6-12), following confirmed diagnosis of ADHD and who meet all
criteria for evaluation, and who have signed parent/child consent/assent, will be randomly
assigned to an immediate treatment or delayed treatment group (6 in each group). Children in
the immediate treatment group will receive the sleep intervention protocol, while those in
the delayed treatment group will initially only receive all of the sleep, activity, and
daytime assessments on the same schedule as the treatment group without any of the treatment
methods. They will be offered the same treatment methods as the immediate treatment group at
week 5.
The study will occur in separate phases. Phase one will consist of an intake session at the
ADHD Clinic to determine eligibility for the study. Phase two will immediately follow (for
eligible participants) and will consist of a one-week baseline to gather sleep,
neuropsychological functioning and daytime behavior data. Sleep functioning will be measured
using both subjective (i.e., parent sleep logs) and objective measures (i.e., actigraphy),
while response time will be assessed using a device that measures continuous reaction-time
performance. Attention and other ADHD-related behaviors will be collected using parent- and
teacher rating scales during baseline. Phase three, which will last 4 weeks, consists of
parents of each child in the treatment group coming to the Clinic to learn a specific
sequence of interventions, first beginning with behavioral methods, followed by melatonin
(if necessary) to improve sleep functioning (80% above baseline). Parents of children in the
delayed treatment phase will not come to the Clinic during phase three, but will be
contacted for a brief phone interview once per week. They will be asked questions pertaining
to any changes in sleep and daytime behaviors. Finally, Phase 4 consists of having all
parents return to the ADHD Clinic, where measures administered at the end of Baseline will
be repeated. At that time, those in the delayed treatment group may enter the treatment
phase. A repeated measure ANOVA using group status (no treatment vs. treatment) across two
time points (baseline, post-sleep intervention) will assess changes in sleep and daytime
functioning over time. Although a group-by-time interaction will indicate treatment
efficacy, this is a small pilot study; the small number of participants in each group likely
precludes the power to determine this statistically. Instead, effect sizes and subjective
measures will be used to describe and justify, if appropriate, an expansion of this study
for a subsequent grant application.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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