Attention-deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
Discriminate Validity of ADHD Subtypes Using Neuropsychological Test
Background: Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), characterized by inattention,
hyperactivity, and impulsivity, is among the most common neuropsychiatric disorders
worldwide (5-10% at school age) and in Taiwan (7.5%). The DSM-IV ADHD consists of three
subtypes: predominantly Inattentive (ADHD-I), predominantly Hyperactivity/Impulsivity
(ADHD-H), and Combined subtypes (ADHD-C). Although the DSM-IV field trials indicate that the
current subtypes differ significantly on variables such as age of onset, gender ratio, and
level of social and academic impairment, little has been addressed whether the DSM-IV
subtypes differ neuropsychologically. Numerous researches have proved that stimulants
(methylphenidate is the only stimulant in Taiwan) are the most effective medication in
treating ADHD. Although the efficacy of methylphenidate on behavioral measures has been
established in Taiwan, there is no information about neuropsychological measures.
Specific Aims:
1. to validate ADHD subtype by neuropsychological measures; and
2. to investigate the efficacy of methylphenidate on the improvement of executive
functioning among children with ADHD.
Subjects and Methods: Participants will consist of 20 children with ADHD-C, 20 with ADHD-I,
10 with ADHD-H and 50 controls without ADHD in the age range of 7 to 10. The measures
include the psychiatric interviews (Chinese K-SADS-E), neuropsychological tests (WISC-III,
Cancellation Test, Digit Span, Trail Making Test, CPT, Circle Tracing Test),
self-administered rating scale (SNAP-IV), and investigator administered assessment (CGI and
Behavior Observation Ratings).
Anticipated Results: We anticipated that children in the ADHD and non-ADHD group will
perform differently on the neuropsychological tests with more deficits in neuropsychological
functions in the ADHD group. Also, we expected that methylphenidate will improve the
performance on the neuropsychological tests and reduce the behavioral symptoms of ADHD
children. Subtypes difference in the neuropsychological functions is also expected.
BACKGROUND AND SIGNIFICANCE Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is among the
most common impairing neuropsychiatric disorder worldwide among children and adolescents
with the prevalence of DSM-IV ADHD in the range of 5-10% in Western countries (Faraone et
al., 2003) and 7.5% in Taiwan (Gau et al., 2005) with the ratio of boys to girls as 3-8:1.
The significance of ADHD in clinical practice and research is not only in its high
prevalence but also in the impairments it brings about in neurocognitive function, academic
performance, and social adjustment.
The DSM-IV ADHD is comprised with three subtypes, predominantly Inattentive (ADHD-I),
predominantly Hyperactivity/Impulsivity (ADHD-H), and Combined subtype (ADHD-C). The DSM-IV
field trials indicate that the current subtypes differ significantly on variables such as
age of onset, gender ratio, and level of social and academic impairment (Lahey et al.,
1994). Although previous researches have suggested that neuropsychological deficits in ADHD
are associated with frontal-subcortical regions (Castellanos, 1997), few studies have
addressed whether the DSM-IV subtypes differ neuropsychologically with inconsistent results
(Nigg et al, 2002).
Many studies have demonstrated the efficacy of stimulants in treating ADHD. Among them,
methylphenidate (MPH) was the widely used and has been rigorously studied (eg. Spencer et
al., 2005; Stein et al., 2005; Wilens et al., 2005). MPH is also the only stimulant
medication for the treatment of ADHD in Taiwan; it has been proved to reduce significantly
the symptoms of ADHD, and to increase self regulation, learning motivation, academic
performance, and interpersonal ability. Meanwhile, its efficacy was also observed in the
significant improvement of neuropsychological functioning (e.g., Konrad et al., 2004).
Given that there is no conclusive finding in the neuropsychological function among ADHD
subtypes and little is known about the neuropsychological deficits in three ADHD subtypes in
the Chinese population, the present study aims to validate ADHD diagnosis and ADHD subtypes
by executive functioning measures. Although the efficacy of methylphenidate on behavioral
measures has been established in Taiwan, there is no information about neuropsychological
measures.
SPECIFIC AIMS:
1. to validate ADHD subtype by neuropsychological measures; and
2. to investigate the efficacy of methylphenidate on the improvement of executive
functioning among children with ADHD.
HYPOTHESIS:
We hypothesize that ADHD and ADHD subtype can be validated by the measures of executive
function and the methylphenidate not only decrease ADHD core symptoms but also improve
executive functions among children with ADHD.
METHOD Participants The sample will consist of 50 child psychiatric patients with ADHD (20
ADHD-I, 20 ADHD-C and 10 ADHD-H) and 50 normal controls, aged 7-10. The inclusion criteria
are patients who have clinically diagnosis of DSM-IV ADHD confirmed by the K-SADS-E, are
aged 7-10, and have IQ > 80; and who and whose parents consent to this study. Participants
will be excluded if they have a history of brain injury or epilepsy, visual/auditory deficit
or were diagnosed as having motor disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, mental
retardation, and depression. In order to recruit a population of pure ADHD (without other
psychiatric comorbidities), children who are comorbid with oppositional defiant disorder
(ODD) or conduct disorder (CD) were excluded, though the concurrence of ODD/CD and ADHD were
high. Normal controls will be recruited from the local elementary school in the same
geographical area.
Measurements Considering the age group selected and symptoms of ADHD, we selected
measurements carefully to ensure that all participants will be able to complete every task
without getting fatigued or being distractive in the task.
1. Chinese version of the Kiddie-Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia-
epidemiology version (K-SADS-E) Development of the Chinese K-SADS-E was carried out by
the Child Psychiatry Research Group in Taiwan, which included a two-stage translation
and modification of several items with psycholinguistic equivalents relevant to the
Taiwanese culture. The K-SADS-E has been widely used in a variety of studies on the
mental illness of children and adolescents in Taiwan (Gau et al., 2005). Mother will be
interviewed independently by two separate interviewers to make child's psychiatric
diagnoses.
2. Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children Short Form (WISC-III short form) WISC-III
(Wechsler, 1991) is a well established scale designed to assess the Full-Scale IQ
(FSIQ) of children under age of 16. It includes 13 subtests to test children's
cognitive ability of different dimensions. Test result is represented by Verbal IQ,
Performance IQ, and Full-Scale IQ. The present research conducted a quad combination of
WISC short form including subtests of Symbol Search, Arithmetic, Block Design, and
Verbal. Previous research suggested the mentioned combination have good reliability
(rxx = .91) and validity (rxx = .90) (Silverstein, 1982), and is preferred while
conducting research to estimate FSIQ.
3. Neuropsychological measures Five neuropsychological measures which consist of 19 task
variables will be used.
Cancellation Test (Rudel et al., 1978) Cancellation Test is a two-part paper-and-pencil
measure of visual scanning. Number Cancellation requires subject to strike out a
three-digit target (257) intermittently placed in a large array of numbers; Shape
Cancellation required subject to strike out a target shape (star) intermittently place
in a filed of other shapes. The total number of commission error, correct hits, and
completed time on the two separate tests will be recorded. Completion time divided by
the number is calculated as one of the indices.
Digit Span The assessor first requires subjects to repeat orally presented digit
strings (Digit Forward) and then recall digits in backwards sequence (Digit Backward).
This task represents the indices of sensory selection and capacity/focus components, in
the present research.
Trail Making Test (TMT; Reitan & Wolfson, 1986) A brief paper-and-pencil test involving
numeric sequencing (Trail A) followed by alpha-numeric sequencing (Trail B) in original
form. The Trail B was modified by using Chinese phonic symbols to substitute for
English alphabet when applying to Chinese participants. Completed time and off-target
errors on the tasks are oriented to the attentional components of sensory selection,
response selection, and capacity/focus.
Continuous Performance Test (CPT; Conners, 1995) The CPT requires tabbing on the space
key when any character other than X shown on the screen. There were six sets in total,
with 20 characters within each set. The Inter-Stimulus Intervals (ISIs) are 1, 2, and 4
seconds, and different ISIs varied between sets. Each character maintains on the screen
for 250 ms. Correct hits, omission errors, commission errors, and reaction times will
be collected as indices of response selection and capacity/focus. The d' value known as
a discriminate factor is one of the indices for sustained attention.
Circle Tracing Test (CTT, Bachorowski & Newman, 1985) This task requires subjects to
trace a large printed circle (20 inches in diameter) with their index finger to measure
inhibition of an ongoing response (eg. Geurts et al, 2004; Scheres et al., 2003). The
word START (in green ink) was printed on the right side of the line and the word STOP
(in red ink) was printed on the left side. The task was administered under two
conditions: first with neutral instruction ('trace the circle') followed by inhibition
instruction ('trace the circle again, but as slow as you can this time') within 12
minutes without subject's knowledge. The dependent variable on this task included time
1 under neutral instruction, time 2 under inhibition instruction, time discrepancy
referred to time 2 minus time 1, and a three-point (0-2) degree of deviation score
assessed by the trained observer. The larger the time discrepancy, the better a
participant is able to inhibit (slow down) the continuous tracing response.
4. Measures of behavior symptoms Subjects' parent will complete the SNAP-IV and a trained
rater will observe the subjects' behaviors and rate on two behavioral scales during the
tasks.
Swanson, Nolan, and Pelham IV scale (SNAP-IV, Swanson et al., 2001) The SNAP-IV is a 26-item
rating scale consisting of the DSM-IV symptoms for the Inattention (Item 1-9) and the
Hyperactivity/Impulsivity domains (Item 10-18) of the criteria for ADHD, and the
oppositional symptoms (Item 19-26) of the criteria for ODD. Several studies have used
different versions of the SNAP, either parent or teacher form, as an outcome measure to
assess the efficacy of treatment for ADHD (e.g., Steele et al., 2006). Regarding
psychometric properties of the SNAP rating scale, the Chinese version of SNAP-IV showed
satisfactory test-retest reliability (intraclass correlation= 0.59~0.72), internal
consistency (alpha=0.88~0.90), concurrent validity (Pearson correlations = 0.56~0.72), and
discriminant validity (Liu et al., 2006).
Clinical Global Impression (CGI, NIMH, 1976) CGI, a three-item scale including Severity of
Illness, Global Improvement, and Efficacy Index, is used to assess treatment response in
psychiatric patients. The Severity of Illness with 7-point scale (1 = normal to 7 =
extremely ill) will be used in this study.
Behavior Observation Ratings This is a four-point (0 = not at all to 3 = extremely much)
rating scales with three items assessing children's behaviors during the task. The three
target behaviors to be observed are "unsteady while remaining seated," "murmuring during
task," and "given up easily" before and after one dose of methylphenidate.
Procedure We will obtain written informed consent of all subjects from both children and
their parents. The day prior to the date of receiving neuropsychological tasks, children
will be asked to halt medication in order to obtain their test results as baseline data to
make comparison with their performance after treatment with MPH.
The testing procedure is as follows: (1) All children (ADHD group and normal controls) will
be assessed IQ and a series of neuropsychological assessments. Their parents will complete
the SNAP-IV scale at the same time. (2) After that, children with ADHD will take IR MPH (at
the same dose as their prescription) and rest for approximately 45 minutes. Meanwhile,
parents of children with ADHD will be interviewed with K-SADS-E by trained interviewer. (3)
Children with ADHD will then be re-assessed CPT. CGI and Behavior observation will be
assessed.
ANTICIPATED RESULT We anticipated that children in the ADHD and non-ADHD group will perform
differently on the neuropsychological tests with more deficits in neuropsychological
functions in the ADHD group. Also, we expected that methylphenidate will improve the
performance on the neuropsychological tests and reduce the behavioral symptoms of ADHD
children. Subtypes difference in the neuropsychological functions is also expected.
CONCLUSION The present research aims to inspect the effect of methylphenidate on behavioral
measures and neuropsychological function among children with ADHD in Taiwan. Understanding
the treatment effect among neuropsychological function and different behavior may help us
clear out the psychopathology of ADHD. Learning the possible difference among subtypes
regarding the relationship of treatment and self-report outcome will benefit in that matter
as well.
;
Observational Model: Case Control
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