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About
This study will look at the effectiveness of osmotic release oral system (OROS) methylphenidate (Concerta) in treating attention deficit hyperactvity disorder (ADHD) in adults. Concerta has received FDA approval for childhood ADHD and there is documentation that it is effective in adult ADHD. However this trial will explore its effectiveness in treating symptoms not a part of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual-III (DSM-III) criteria. Subjects will experience one screening visit and one baseline visit. Those who meet admission criteria will enter the double-blind phase. This will involve two 4-week treatment periods one of which will involve the use of Concerta and the other a placebo pill. Subjects who complete the double-blind phase will be allowed to enter a 180-day, open-label Concerta phase designed to assess long-term effects.
Full description
ADHD affects from 3 to 5% of children, persists into adolescence 40 to 70% of these children and continues into adulthood in at least 50% of affected adolescents. Pharmacotherapy for ADHD in adults has paralleled that used for children, with generally positive results (Spencer, 1998). Never-the-less, it is not clear that the dimensions of medication response in adults are the same as in children. The extent to which the symptoms change with age remains open to question. This trial is created to include a variety of outcome measures which will enhance the number of symptoms assessed.
Methylphenidate was the first medication shown to be effective in treatment for adults with ADHD and continues to be widely used. Several studies have demonstrated the usefulness of methylphenidate in adult ADHD (Wender et al, 1985, Spencer et al, 1995). These studies have not shown any unexpected drawbacks to treatment with methylphenidate. The extended release formulations represent an improvement over the immediate release versions for many patients.
This is a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized, crossover trial comparing OROS methylphenidate with placebo. The double-blind trial will be preceded by an enrollment period consisting of a screening visit followed by a baseline visit. Patients who continue to meet admission criteria at baseline will be randomized into the first of two 4-week treatment periods. We will attempt to reach the highest tolerated dose size within 2 weeks and then observe the response over the last two weeks of each crossover phase. The double-blind period will be followed by a 180 day open-treatment, flexible-dose phase designed to assess long-term effects.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Adults meeting DSM-IV-Text Revision criteria for ADHD, the Utah Criteria for ADHD, and experiencing at least moderate impairment (a score of 4 or greater on the CGI-Severity Scale for ADHD at both Screening and Baseline visits) will be enrolled. Other criteria include:
Subjects ages 18 to 65, inclusive;
Female subjects are eligible to enter and participate in this study only if:
Subject must be in general good health as determined by medical history, ECG, and other analysis that, in the judgment of the study physician, would confirm the patient's good health.
Subjects must read and write at a level sufficient to provide written informed consent and complete study-related materials.
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
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47 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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