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ADHD pharmacotherapy and risk of suicidal behaviours, substance misuse, accidental injuries, transport accidents, and criminality: emulation of target trials

ADHD pharmacotherapy and risk of suicidal behaviours, substance misuse, accidental injuries, transport accidents, and criminality: emulation of target trials
ADHD pharmacotherapy and risk of suicidal behaviours, substance misuse, accidental injuries, transport accidents, and criminality: emulation of target trials
Objective: to examine the effects of ADHD medication on five outcomes including suicidal behaviours, substance misuse, accidental injuries, transport accidents, and criminality.

Design: target trial emulations using cloning, censoring and weighting.

Setting: linkage of national registers in Sweden, 2007-2020.

Participants: individuals aged 6 to 64 years with a new diagnosis of ADHD, who either initiated or did not initiate ADHD medication within three months of diagnosis.

Main outcome measures: following consultation with individuals with lived experience, we assessed first and recurrent events of five outcomes over two years after ADHD diagnosis: suicidal behaviours, substance misuse, accidental injuries, transport accidents, and criminality.

Results: of 148 581 individuals with ADHD (median age, 17.4 years; 41.3% women), 84 282 (56.7%) individuals initiated ADHD medication, with methylphenidate being the most commonly prescribed at initiation (88.5%). The use of ADHD medication was associated with reduced rates in the first occurrence of suicidal behaviours (weighted incidence rates: 14.5 per 1 000 person-years in the initiation group vs. 16.9 in the non-initiation group; adjusted incidence rate ratio [IRR], 0.83, 95% confidence interval, 0.78 to 0.88), substance misuse (58.7 vs. 69.1 per 1 000 person-years; IRR, 0.85 [0.83 to 0.87]), transport accidents (24.0 vs. 27.5 per 1 000 person-years; IRR, 0.88 [0.82 to 0.94]), and criminality (65.1 vs. 76.1 per 1 000 person-years; IRR, 0.87 [0.83 to 0.90]), whereas the reduction was not statistically significant for accidental injuries (88.5 vs. 90.1 per 1 000 person-years; IRR, 0.98 [0.96 to 1.01]). The reduced rates were more pronounced among individuals with prior events, with IRR ranging from 0.79 (0.72 to 0.86) for suicidal behaviours to 0.97 (0.93 to 1.00) for accidental injuries. When considering recurrent events, ADHD medication was significantly associated with reduced rates of all five outcomes, with IRR of 0.85 (0.77 to 0.93) for suicidal behaviours, 0.75 (0.72 to 0.78) for substance misuse, 0.96 (0.92 to 0.99) for accidental injuries, 0.84 (0.76 to 0.91) for transport accidents, and 0.75 (0.71 to 0.79) for criminality.

Conclusions: use of ADHD medication was associated with beneficial effects in reducing the risks of suicidal behaviours, substance misuse, transport accidents, and criminality, but not accidental injuries when considering first event rate. The risk reductions were more pronounced considering recurrent events, with reduced rates for all five outcomes. This target trial emulation study using national register data provides evidence that is representative of patients in routine clinical settings.
0959-8138
Zhang, Le
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Zhu, Nanbo
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Sjölander, Arvid
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Nourredine, Mikail
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Li, Lin
7864ce7c-4b85-438b-93d7-2f3d7606ad01
Garcia-Argibay, Miguel
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Kuja-Halkola, Ralf
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Brikell, Isabell
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Lichtenstein, Paul
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D'onofrio, Brian M.
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Larsson, Henrik
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Cortese, Samuele
53d4bf2c-4e0e-4c77-9385-218350560fdb
Chang, Zheng
46d8b0f4-85f3-4ccd-bc4e-d176843a37e2
Zhang, Le
fd8a1d48-3a6d-40c5-8e47-bf3477eef21f
Zhu, Nanbo
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Sjölander, Arvid
17483419-ae59-46ef-a587-8623aa008834
Nourredine, Mikail
160f3a41-baef-4e62-bb7a-2b8f1efd1697
Li, Lin
7864ce7c-4b85-438b-93d7-2f3d7606ad01
Garcia-Argibay, Miguel
e5a6941e-4dcc-401a-9de4-09557c8856ef
Kuja-Halkola, Ralf
e8335fa9-f245-49a8-9df4-ef31767cd3e8
Brikell, Isabell
8ce0666a-d578-4128-9385-20358b875b7c
Lichtenstein, Paul
1e1573e3-7442-4d1f-969f-17dc9b7edaa4
D'onofrio, Brian M.
c0b7aed7-382b-46e8-8256-03346bb3a5d7
Larsson, Henrik
4132f7c6-5d52-43a1-be38-d343e67107cf
Cortese, Samuele
53d4bf2c-4e0e-4c77-9385-218350560fdb
Chang, Zheng
46d8b0f4-85f3-4ccd-bc4e-d176843a37e2

Zhang, Le, Zhu, Nanbo, Sjölander, Arvid, Nourredine, Mikail, Li, Lin, Garcia-Argibay, Miguel, Kuja-Halkola, Ralf, Brikell, Isabell, Lichtenstein, Paul, D'onofrio, Brian M., Larsson, Henrik, Cortese, Samuele and Chang, Zheng (2025) ADHD pharmacotherapy and risk of suicidal behaviours, substance misuse, accidental injuries, transport accidents, and criminality: emulation of target trials. British Medical Journal. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: to examine the effects of ADHD medication on five outcomes including suicidal behaviours, substance misuse, accidental injuries, transport accidents, and criminality.

Design: target trial emulations using cloning, censoring and weighting.

Setting: linkage of national registers in Sweden, 2007-2020.

Participants: individuals aged 6 to 64 years with a new diagnosis of ADHD, who either initiated or did not initiate ADHD medication within three months of diagnosis.

Main outcome measures: following consultation with individuals with lived experience, we assessed first and recurrent events of five outcomes over two years after ADHD diagnosis: suicidal behaviours, substance misuse, accidental injuries, transport accidents, and criminality.

Results: of 148 581 individuals with ADHD (median age, 17.4 years; 41.3% women), 84 282 (56.7%) individuals initiated ADHD medication, with methylphenidate being the most commonly prescribed at initiation (88.5%). The use of ADHD medication was associated with reduced rates in the first occurrence of suicidal behaviours (weighted incidence rates: 14.5 per 1 000 person-years in the initiation group vs. 16.9 in the non-initiation group; adjusted incidence rate ratio [IRR], 0.83, 95% confidence interval, 0.78 to 0.88), substance misuse (58.7 vs. 69.1 per 1 000 person-years; IRR, 0.85 [0.83 to 0.87]), transport accidents (24.0 vs. 27.5 per 1 000 person-years; IRR, 0.88 [0.82 to 0.94]), and criminality (65.1 vs. 76.1 per 1 000 person-years; IRR, 0.87 [0.83 to 0.90]), whereas the reduction was not statistically significant for accidental injuries (88.5 vs. 90.1 per 1 000 person-years; IRR, 0.98 [0.96 to 1.01]). The reduced rates were more pronounced among individuals with prior events, with IRR ranging from 0.79 (0.72 to 0.86) for suicidal behaviours to 0.97 (0.93 to 1.00) for accidental injuries. When considering recurrent events, ADHD medication was significantly associated with reduced rates of all five outcomes, with IRR of 0.85 (0.77 to 0.93) for suicidal behaviours, 0.75 (0.72 to 0.78) for substance misuse, 0.96 (0.92 to 0.99) for accidental injuries, 0.84 (0.76 to 0.91) for transport accidents, and 0.75 (0.71 to 0.79) for criminality.

Conclusions: use of ADHD medication was associated with beneficial effects in reducing the risks of suicidal behaviours, substance misuse, transport accidents, and criminality, but not accidental injuries when considering first event rate. The risk reductions were more pronounced considering recurrent events, with reduced rates for all five outcomes. This target trial emulation study using national register data provides evidence that is representative of patients in routine clinical settings.

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Accepted/In Press date: 12 June 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 503217
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/503217
ISSN: 0959-8138
PURE UUID: 6488d377-a4a6-4541-bc6c-f3a42bc17cdc
ORCID for Miguel Garcia-Argibay: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4811-2330
ORCID for Samuele Cortese: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5877-8075

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Date deposited: 24 Jul 2025 16:38
Last modified: 24 Aug 2025 04:01

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Contributors

Author: Le Zhang
Author: Nanbo Zhu
Author: Arvid Sjölander
Author: Mikail Nourredine
Author: Lin Li
Author: Miguel Garcia-Argibay ORCID iD
Author: Ralf Kuja-Halkola
Author: Isabell Brikell
Author: Paul Lichtenstein
Author: Brian M. D'onofrio
Author: Henrik Larsson
Author: Samuele Cortese ORCID iD
Author: Zheng Chang

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