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- Title
A controlled trial of methylphenidate in adults with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder and substance use disorders.
- Authors
Carpentier, Pieter J.; De Jong, Cor A. J.; Dijkstra, Boukje A. G.; Verbrugge, Cor A. G.; Krabbe, Paul F. M.
- Abstract
Aims Attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is common among adult patients with substance use disorders. The benefits of treating ADHD in these patients are uncertain and the prescription of psychostimulants is disputed, because of the risk of abuse. This study examined the short-term effectiveness of methylphenidate treatment for ADHD in adults with substance use disorders. Design Double-blind, placebo-controlled, multiple cross-over (A-B-A-B design) comparative trial of methylphenidate versus placebo. Setting In-patient addiction treatment facility. Participants Twenty-five patients with ADHD who were receiving in-patient treatment for various substance use disorders. Intervention During the course of 8 weeks, each participant completed two phases of placebo and two phases of active medication treatment, in a fixed low-dosage schedule (up to 0.6 mg/kg/day). Abstinence was maintained during the study. Measurements The outcome measure was ADHD symptomatology, as measured with the ADHD rating scale-IV. The results were compared using MANOVA repeated measures. Findings Nineteen of the 25 patients completed the trial. A significant reduction in ADHD symptoms was observed in the first week in both conditions. The positive response to active treatment (nine patients; 36%) was not significantly higher than that to placebo (five patients; 20%). Conclusions In this small pilot study, the effect of low-dose methylphenidate in adult ADHD patients with concomitant substance use disorders is limited. ADHD symptoms in adults were susceptible to a distinct short-term placebo response.
- Subjects
METHYLPHENIDATE; STIMULANTS; ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder; BEHAVIOR disorders in children; SUBSTANCE abuse; ADDICTIONS; PERSONALITY disorders
- Publication
Addiction, 2005, Vol 100, Issue 12, p1868
- ISSN
0965-2140
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1360-0443.2005.01272.x