Medication adherence and persistence in children and adolescents with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): a systematic review and qualitative update
Medication adherence and persistence in children and adolescents with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): a systematic review and qualitative update
Low medication-adherence and persistence may reduce the effectiveness of ADHD-medication. This preregistered systematic review (PROSPERO CRD42020218654) on medication-adherence and persistence in children and adolescents with ADHD focuses on clinically relevant questions and extends previous reviews by including additional studies. We included a total of n=66 studies. There was a lack of consistency in the measurement of adherence/persistence between studies. Pooling the medication possession ratios (MPR) and using the most common adherence definition (MPR≥80%) indicated that only 22.9% of participants had good adherence at 12-month follow-up. Treatment persistence on medication measured by treatment duration during a 12-month follow-up averaged 170 days (5.6 months). Our findings indicate that medication-adherence and persistence among youth with ADHD are generally poor and have not changed in recent years. Clinicians need to be aware that various factors may contribute to poor adherence/persistence and that long-acting stimulants and psychoeducational programs may help to improve adherence/persistence. However, the evidence to whether better adherence/persistence contributes to better long-term outcomes is limited and requires further research.
adherence, persistence, ADHD medication, systematic literature review, children, adolescents
Ferrin, Maite
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Häge, Alexander
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Swanson, James M.
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Wong, Kirstie H.T.W.
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Dittmann, Ralf W
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Banaschewski, Tobias
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Coghill, David
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Santosh, Paramala J.
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Romanos, Marcel
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Simonoff, Emily
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Buitelaar, Jan K.
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Cortese, Samuele
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European ADHD Guidelines Group (EAGG)
Ferrin, Maite
8becf056-79bb-4a27-94ed-40f851d12f94
Häge, Alexander
c5587108-7ba3-4985-8e45-cfba5ae61bf5
Swanson, James M.
189edce0-05ac-4906-8241-cd9e11423506
Wong, Kirstie H.T.W.
90796c1c-a845-4d9d-8965-9c3340a4c65c
Dittmann, Ralf W
8e6d3484-9cd1-45fe-8d66-d12735860d23
Banaschewski, Tobias
62864e0d-9820-40ee-b28d-38d3a131b7d3
Coghill, David
deea8957-fdfc-488a-a3bb-fb9b536c7172
Santosh, Paramala J.
4e248127-856c-439d-8ae8-ddbd76d32c65
Romanos, Marcel
5c528f4e-c368-4ad3-956a-02ab952eac73
Simonoff, Emily
f47d91a8-3d57-4183-bf24-80352c55eedc
Buitelaar, Jan K.
a2e08a14-4de4-419e-9ea8-1e97ebbdddba
Cortese, Samuele
53d4bf2c-4e0e-4c77-9385-218350560fdb
Ferrin, Maite, Häge, Alexander, Swanson, James M., Wong, Kirstie H.T.W., Dittmann, Ralf W, Banaschewski, Tobias, Coghill, David, Santosh, Paramala J., Romanos, Marcel, Simonoff, Emily and Buitelaar, Jan K.
,
European ADHD Guidelines Group (EAGG)
(2024)
Medication adherence and persistence in children and adolescents with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): a systematic review and qualitative update.
European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry.
(doi:10.1007/s00787-024-02538-z).
Abstract
Low medication-adherence and persistence may reduce the effectiveness of ADHD-medication. This preregistered systematic review (PROSPERO CRD42020218654) on medication-adherence and persistence in children and adolescents with ADHD focuses on clinically relevant questions and extends previous reviews by including additional studies. We included a total of n=66 studies. There was a lack of consistency in the measurement of adherence/persistence between studies. Pooling the medication possession ratios (MPR) and using the most common adherence definition (MPR≥80%) indicated that only 22.9% of participants had good adherence at 12-month follow-up. Treatment persistence on medication measured by treatment duration during a 12-month follow-up averaged 170 days (5.6 months). Our findings indicate that medication-adherence and persistence among youth with ADHD are generally poor and have not changed in recent years. Clinicians need to be aware that various factors may contribute to poor adherence/persistence and that long-acting stimulants and psychoeducational programs may help to improve adherence/persistence. However, the evidence to whether better adherence/persistence contributes to better long-term outcomes is limited and requires further research.
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Accepted/In Press date: 15 July 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 6 August 2024
Keywords:
adherence, persistence, ADHD medication, systematic literature review, children, adolescents
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Local EPrints ID: 492672
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492672
ISSN: 1018-8827
PURE UUID: 8085506c-1a15-4feb-a11d-38d239c7ab67
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Date deposited: 12 Aug 2024 16:32
Last modified: 13 Aug 2024 01:46
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Contributors
Author:
Maite Ferrin
Author:
Alexander Häge
Author:
James M. Swanson
Author:
Kirstie H.T.W. Wong
Author:
Ralf W Dittmann
Author:
Tobias Banaschewski
Author:
David Coghill
Author:
Paramala J. Santosh
Author:
Marcel Romanos
Author:
Emily Simonoff
Author:
Jan K. Buitelaar
Corporate Author: European ADHD Guidelines Group (EAGG)
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