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Majority of Young People with ADHD Use Their Medications
Appropriately
Medical Studies/Trials :: News-Medical.Net
Published: Tuesday, 4-Apr-2006
A major concern regarding the use of stimulant medications to treat
attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in adolescents and young
adults has been the risk that they will be misused or diverted to those
for whom they have not been prescribed.
A new study from Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) researchers has
found that, while the great majority of young people with ADHD use their
medications appropriately, a small percentage are likely to abuse or to
sell prescribed stimulants. The report, appearing in the April 2006
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, also
identifies factors that may characterize those most likely to misuse their
drugs and suggests potential strategies to reduce the risk.
"In finding that misuse of stimulants prescribed for ADHD typically takes
place in the context of abuse of other substances, our results show
remarkable convergence with previous surveys of stimulant abuse among
college students," says Timothy Wilens, MD, director of Substance Abuse
Services in MGH Pediatric Psychopharmacology, who led the study. "By
putting a face on these patients, we can start to address the problem with
targeted strategies."
The current investigation enrolled participants in a long-term study of
young men treated with medications for a variety of behavioral and
psychiatric disorders. Ten years after originally joining that study, 98
participants - 55 with ADHD and 48 who did not have ADHD - were
interviewed about their overall progress and current symptoms. The young
men, with an average age of 21, also completed a confidential
questionnaire asking whether they had sold their medications or had
misused them - including taking too much, getting high on their
medications, or taking them in combination with alcohol or other
substances of abuse - during the past four years. Of the 98 surveyed
participants, 46 also met the criteria for substance use disorder and 21
for conduct disorder.
The results showed that participants with ADHD were more likely than those
without ADHD to report misusing their medication, with 11 percent
admitting selling their drugs, 22 percent reporting they took too much, 10
percent getting high and 31 percent admitting they had taken their
medication along with alcohol or other drugs. Among those without ADHD,
none reported selling their medications, 5 percent said they had taken too
much or had gotten high, and 25 percent admitted using their medication
with other drugs.
All of the ADHD participants who sold their medications also had either
substance use disorder or conduct disorder, and 83 percent of those who
reported misusing also had one of the other disorders. Another key finding
was that immediate release stimulant formulations were most likely to be
misused or diverted, while no participant reported misuse or diversion of
extended release stimulant medications.
"Now that we know who misuses those drugs and which are most likely to be
misused, we can pursue efforts to make sure they are appropriately
prescribed and monitored," says Wilens. "Our results strongly signal that
we should be more careful about what we prescribe to patients who also
have conduct disorder and substance use disorder and also support a higher
risk of misuse of immediate release stimulants, which is consistent with
other recent studies.
"While we need additional research to make definitive recommendations,
from my own experience I'd suggest that physicians prescribe extended
release formulations and consider non-stimulant drugs for those at
increased risk. And I suggest to my college-age patients that they store
their drugs securely, don't advertise that they're taking stimulants and
never make them available to others."
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