Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Symptom Profiles in Medication-Treated Adults Entering a Psychosocial Treatment Program.

Journal of ADHD & related disorders Pub Date : 2009-01-01
Laura E Knouse, Susan Sprich, Christine Cooper-Vince, Steven A Safren
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Abstract

Background: Although medications are the most widely studied effective treatments for adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), patients treated with medications often have significant residual symptoms that may be amenable to psychosocial intervention. Few studies, however, report on the structure and severity of specific residual ADHD symptoms in adult patients who have been treated with medications. This information may be important in identifying the most important psychosocial treatment targets for medicated adults with ADHD with residual symptoms.

Objectives: Identify which symptoms of ADHD are most frequent and severe for medication-treated adults. Identify meaningful factors underlying self-report and clinician ratings in this group.

Methods: Self-reported and clinician-rated ADHD symptom data from 105 adults in the community already receiving medication treatment who were entering cognitive behavioral therapy studies were examined. First, we examined the frequency and severity of each of the 18 ADHD symptoms that were present in the sample. Second, we conducted exploratory factor analyses of self-reported and clinician-rated ADHD symptoms to best describe the structure of residual symptoms in medication-treated adults, Lastly, we examined the association of the resulting factor scores with clinician-rated global ADHD severity (Clinical Global Impressions) and functional impairment (Global Assessment of Functioning) scales to determine which factors relate to overall severity.

Results: The 2 most frequent (self-reported and clinician-rated) residual symptoms were disorganization (85%-88%) and distractibility (74%-83%). Exploratory factor analyses for both self-reported and clinician-rated data yielded a 3-factor model: (1) Hyperactivity/Restlessness, (2) Impulsivity/Poor Prospective Memory, and (3) Inattention. Using multiple regression, the Inattention factor from self-reported and clinician-rated data was most strongly, consistently, and uniquely related to clinician ratings of both illness severity and functioning.

Conclusions: In this sample, disorganization and distractibility were the most frequent and clinically significant residual symptoms; therefore, these should be important targets in psychosocial treatments for this population. Scoring symptom rating scales in medication-treated adults with ADHD using Hyperactivity. Restlessness, Impulsivity/Poor Prospective Memory, and Inattention factors may be more informative with respect to evaluating psychosocial treatment outcome than overall scale scores alone.

进入社会心理治疗项目的药物治疗成人的注意缺陷/多动障碍症状概况
背景:虽然药物治疗是成人注意力缺陷/多动障碍(ADHD)最广泛研究的有效治疗方法,但接受药物治疗的患者往往有明显的残留症状,可能适合社会心理干预。然而,很少有研究报道在接受药物治疗的成年患者中特定残余ADHD症状的结构和严重程度。这一信息可能是重要的,以确定最重要的社会心理治疗目标的药物治疗成人ADHD的残余症状。目的:确定哪些ADHD症状在接受药物治疗的成年人中最常见和最严重。确定本组患者自我报告和临床医生评分背后的有意义因素。方法:对105名已经接受药物治疗的社区成年人的自我报告和临床评定的ADHD症状数据进行了检查,这些成年人正在进行认知行为治疗研究。首先,我们检查了样本中出现的18种ADHD症状的频率和严重程度。其次,我们对自我报告的ADHD症状和临床评定的ADHD症状进行了探索性因素分析,以最好地描述药物治疗成人的残留症状结构。最后,我们检查了所得因素得分与临床评定的ADHD总体严重程度(临床总体印象)和功能障碍(整体功能评估)量表的关联,以确定哪些因素与总体严重程度有关。结果:2种最常见的(自我报告和临床评定)残留症状是混乱(85%-88%)和注意力不集中(74%-83%)。对自我报告和临床评定数据的探索性因素分析得出了一个三因素模型:(1)多动/躁动,(2)冲动/前瞻性记忆差,(3)注意力不集中。使用多元回归,来自自我报告和临床评估数据的注意力不集中因素与临床医生对疾病严重程度和功能的评估最强烈、一致且唯一相关。结论:在本组患者中,紊乱和注意力不集中是最常见和临床显著的残留症状;因此,这些应该是对这一人群进行心理社会治疗的重要目标。用多动症治疗的成人患者的症状评定量表评分。在评估心理社会治疗结果方面,不安、冲动/前瞻性记忆差和注意力不集中因素可能比单独的总体量表得分更有价值。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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