Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in adults is a common psychiatric disorder, with important consequences in terms of quality of life, mental health (associated disorders and poorer response to treatment), family life, risk of accidents; with a consequent cost for society.
Adult ADHD is frequently associated with psychiatric co-morbidities, and notably associated with mood disorders (major depressive disorder or bipolar disorder) in about 50% of cases.
The diagnosis of ADHD in adults is made in patients with an attentional complaint (pure ADHD or ADHD-P), but also very often in the management of a comorbid mood disorder (ADHD associated with mood disorder, or ADHD-MD). In this case, the ADHD had no impact during childhood and adolescence.
Medication management is well established for ADHD-P, and medication is based on methylphenidate, which has a rapid and significant effect on attentional symptoms and impulsivity. However, in the case of ADHD-HD, there is little evidence of treatment efficacy and the mechanisms of action of methylphenidate at the brain level are poorly understood.
The aim of the study is to determine the neural mechanisms of the effect of methylphenidate, using functional MRI and EEG, in ADHD-P and ADHD-HD patients, and to compare them to healthy subjects. A single dose allows us to observe effects that are then persistent with repeated doses. The aim is to determine, by means of a biomarker, whether methylphenidate treatment responds to the same mechanisms in the different groups and would be relevant in ADHD-P as in ADHD-HD.
Main objective:
To determine whether methylphenidate impacts differently on brain circuits associated with cognitive functions in the two clinical populations studied (adult ADHD patients and patients with post mood disorder attentional deficit) and in comparison to controls.
Secondary objectives:
Full description
It is a cross-over, randomized, controlled, double-blind, study. 3 groups of 20 subjects are constituted: A: adult patients with ADHD (ADHD-P) B: patients with attention deficit due to/emphasized by mood disorders (ADHD-HD) C: healthy control population
During the inclusion visit the subjects fill in self-questionnaires (ASRS, WURS, WRAADDS, WFIRFS, TEMPS-A, BDI, BAI, RCTQ, mind-wandering). A 45-minute neuropsychological assessment will be carried out by a neuropsychologist, followed by training in the cognitive tasks used during the experimental sessions.
During imaging session 1 (3 to 60 days from inclusion):
Patients usually taking methylphenidate will discontinue methylphenidate treatment two days the imaging session.
Subject takes treatment (or placebo) 30-60 minutes before MRI. The MRI is performed at rest and associated with cognitive tasks (SART) (65 minutes duration). EEG is performed after in combination with a cognitive task (SART) (duration 40 minutes). Finally subjects complete self-questionnaires.
During imaging session 2 (14 to 90 days from inclusion): the same procedure is done again.
Patients usually taking methylphenidate will discontinue methylphenidate treatment two days before the session.
Subject takes placebo (if treatment during imaging session 1) or treatment (if placebo during imaging session 1) 30-60 minutes before MRI. MRI and EEG procedure are the same.
fMRI imaging includes rest and imaging during SART task (Go-NoGo), using BOLD and ASL sequences. EEG is performed during SART task.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion criteria common to all groups:
Inclusion criteria for Group A: ADHD patients without associated mood disorder (ADHD-P)
Inclusion criteria for Group B: Patients with attention deficit disorder due to/accentuated by mood disorders (ADHD-MD)
Inclusion criteria for Group C: healthy subjects control
Exclusion criteria common to all groups
Subjects with contraindication to methylphenidate :
Diagnosis or history of severe depression, anorexia nervosa or anorexic disorder, suicidal tendencies, psychotic symptoms, severe mood disorders, mania, schizophrenia, psychopathic or borderline personality disorder.
Diagnosis or history of episodic and severe (type 1) (and poorly controlled) bipolar (affective) disorder.
Subjectis with contraindication to performing an MRI: presence of non-removable ferromagnetic body, prosthesis, pacemaker, medication delivered by an implanted pump, vascular clip or stent, heart valve or ventricular shunt
History that may affect brain anatomy or be related to an abnormality (neonatal suffering, neurosurgical operation, comitiality, stroke, head injury with unconsciousness of more than 15 minutes and mental retardation)
History that may affect brain function (general anaesthesia or ECT within 3 months prior to inclusion)
Substance Use Disorder as per DSM-5 criteria (except tobacco)
Pregnant women or, in women of childbearing age and ability (non-sterile), lack of effective contraception
Breastfeeding women
Severe or unstable somatic pathology.
Subject deprived of liberty, or in care under restraint
Subject under safeguard of justice
Incompetent subject (subject to a legal protection measure: curatorship, guardianship, future protection mandate, family habilitation)
Impossibility to give informed information about the subject (subject in an emergency situation, difficulties in understanding the subject, ...)
Subject in exclusion period defined by another protocol in progress
Exclusion criteria for Group A: ADHD patients without associated mood disorder (ADHD-P)
Exclusion criteria for Group B: Patients with attention deficit disorder due to/accentuated by mood disorders (ADHD-MD)
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
80 participants in 3 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Hélène SOAVELO; Sébastien WEIBEL, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal