A Double-Blind Comparison of Concerta and Placebo in Adults With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
Information source: Massachusetts General Hospital
Information obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov on June 20, 2008 Link to the current ClinicalTrials.gov record.
Condition(s) targeted: ADHD
Intervention: methylphenidate HCl (Concerta) (Drug)
Phase: Phase 4
Status: Recruiting
Sponsored by: Massachusetts General Hospital Official(s) and/or principal investigator(s): Joseph Biederman, MD, Principal Investigator, Affiliation: Massachusetts General Hospital
Overall contact: Meghan Dougherty, BS, Phone: 617 503-1051, Email: mdougherty2@partners.org
Summary
This is a double-blind, placebo-controlled study using daily doses of up to 1. 3 mg/kg/day of
Concerta in the treatment of adults with the DSM-IV diagnosis of attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) (childhood onset). We hypothesize ADHD symptomatology in
adults with DSM-IV ADHD will be responsive to Concerta treatment and Concerta-associated
response of ADHD symptomatology in adults will be sustained over time.
Clinical Details
Official title: A Double-Blind Comparison of Concerta and Placebo in Adults With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
Study design: Treatment, Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo Control, Crossover Assignment, Safety/Efficacy Study
Primary outcome: Symptom reduction using ADHD-Clinical Global Impression and ADHD Symptom Checklist Severity scale administered at each visit.
Detailed description:
Concerta was specially developed to replace three-times-a-day IR methylphenidate, making it
an ideal option for patients with ADHD. Moreover, the once-a-day administration of Concerta
secures a steady delivery of methylphenidate across the day, minimizing the well-known risks
of peaks and valleys of IR methylphenidate, which could offer an added advantage to the
pharmacokinetic advantage of once-a-day administration. Despite these putative advantages,
whether this new delivery system will lead to the same results as those documented with
immediate-response methylphenidate in the treatments of adults with ADHD requires empirical
corroboration. To this end we are conducting a randomized controlled clinical trial to
evaluate the short- and medium-term safety and efficacy of Concerta in the treatment of
adults with ADHD with and without co-morbid psychiatric disorders. We also wish to examine
the role of genetics in predicting ADHD treatment response to Concerta. There is growing
literature that supports the role of genetic factors in treatment response in youth with
ADHD, and we seek to further explore this relationship in adults.
The proposed study includes the use of a 34-week design to document the response rate,
assessment of the impact of Concerta on functional capacities (quality of life, psychosocial
function) and cognition, and careful assessment of safety and tolerability.
Eligibility
Minimum age: 18 Years.
Maximum age: 55 Years.
Gender(s): Both.
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
1. Male and female outpatients older than 18 and younger than 55 years of age.
2. Subjects with the diagnosis of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), by
DSM-IV, as manifested in clinical evaluation and confirmed by structured interview.
3. ADHD Symptom Checklist score > 24.
4. Patients with past history of depression, bipolar disorder, anxiety disorder
(including OCD) without current disorder for > 3 months as ascertained through
structured diagnostic interview and clinical exam.
5. Subjects treated for anxiety disorders and depression who are on a stable medication
regimen for at least three months, and who have a disorder-specific CGI-Severity score
≤ 3 (mildly ill) and who have a score on the Hamilton-Depression and Hamilton-Anxiety
rating scales below 15 (mild range).
6. Subjects with a past history of tics but tic free for > 1 year.
7. Subjects with past history of substance use disorders but substance free for > 6
months.
8. Subjects receiving non-MAOI antidepressants (e. g., SSRI’s, bupropion, venlafaxine) or
benzodiazepines who have been on a stable regimen for > 3 months for any of the
conditions listed above.
Exclusion Criteria:
1. Any clinically unstable psychiatric conditions including the following: acute
psychosis, acute panic, acute OCD, acute mania, acute suicidality, bipolar disorder,
acute substance use disorders (alcohol or drugs, sociopathy, criminality, or
delinquency.
2. Any metabolic, neurological, hepatic, renal, cardiovascular, hematological, opthalmic,
or endocrine disease.
3. Clinically significant abnormal baseline laboratory values which include the
following:
1. Values > 20% above the upper range of the laboratory standard of a basic
metabolic screen.
2. Exclusionary blood pressure > 140 (systolic) and 90 (diastolic).
3. Exclusionary ECG parameters: QTC > 460 msec, QRS > 120 msec, and PR > 200 msec.
Subjects having ECG evidence of ischemia or arrhythmia as reviewed by an
independent cardiologist.
4. Mental retardation (IQ <75).
5. Organic brain disorders.
6. Seizures or tics in the last year.
7. Pregnant or nursing females.
8. Subjects with current adequate treatment for ADHD or a history of a previous adequate
trial of Concerta.
9. Non-English speaking subjects will not be allowed into the study for the following
reasons:
1. the assessment instruments are unavailable and have not been adequately
standardized in other languages;
2. our clinical trials facility is located in Cambridge and not at the MGH main
campus; thus translators are unavailable;
3. even if such translation services were available, the assessments in the English
language conducted by English-speaking clinicians and raters with
English-speaking subjects are already extremely time-consuming, lasting many
hours, making it unfeasible, unrealistic, and of dubious clinical validity to
conduct them with a translator with non-English-speaking subjects;
4. psychiatric questionnaires and evaluations are taxing, and adding the complexity
of a translator has the potential to make the patient experience even more
exhausting
Locations and Contacts
Meghan Dougherty, BS, Phone: 617 503-1051, Email: mdougherty2@partners.org
Massachusetts General Hospital, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, United States; Recruiting Meghan Dougherty, BS, Phone: 617-503-1051, Email: mdougherty2@partners.org Megan Aleardi, BA, Phone: 617 503-1405, Email: maleardi@partners.org Joseph Biederman, MD, Principal Investigator
Additional Information
Starting date: June 2003
Last updated: April 23, 2007
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