Combination Therapy Benefits Children With ADHD
While
pharmacologic agents have a proved effective in children with
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), some children have
suboptimal response to a single pharmacologic agent.
A recent study by Dr. Timothy E. Wilens and colleagues, published in the January 2012 issue of the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
(JAACAP), is the first randomized placebo-controlled trial designed to
assess efficacy and safety of guanfacine extended release (GXR) as an
adjunct to psychostimulants in children and adolescents diagnosed with
ADHD who had a suboptimal response to a psychostimulant alone.
As reported in the article "A Controlled Trial of Extended-release
Guanfacine and Psychostimulants for Attention-deficit/hyperactivity
disorder," Wilens and colleagues conducted a nine week multicenter,
double-blind, placebo-controlled, dose-optimization study, with
participants in 59 study sites who continued their stable dose of
psychostimulant given in the morning and were randomized to receive GXR
in the morning, GXR in the evening, or placebo.
For both morning and evening administration of GXR, subjects receiving
GXR plus a psychostimulant showed significantly greater improvement from
baseline to endpoint, as measured by the ADHD-Rating Scale IV total
score, compared with subjects receiving placebo plus a psychostimulant.
In particular, the inattention subscale rating and the hyperactivity/
impulsivity subscales of the ADHD-RS-IV showed significantly greater
improvements from baseline in subjects receiving GXR with a
psychostimulant compared with subjects receiving placebo plus
psychostimulant. Significant benefits of adjunctive administration were
observed whether GXR was administered in the morning or evening. No new
safety signals emerged after adjunctive administration of GXR with
psychostimulants compared with psychostimulants alone.
Reflecting on their research findings, Wilens and colleagues stated,
"The results of this study support the hypothesis that adjunctive
administration of the selective alpha2A-adrenoceptoragonist, GXR, to a
psychostimulant in subjects with suboptimal response to psychostimulants
reduces ADHD symptoms over placebo with a psychostimulant."
Source-Eurekalert
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