Caution on Diagnosis and Adult Use | ADHD Information
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ADHD Drugs: Effective and Generally Safe for Kids and Teens,
But New Report Advises Caution on Diagnosis and Adult Use
Consumer Reports Best Buy Drugs project analyzes attention deficit medications
(Washington, D.C.) – Between 60 percent and 80 percent of children
and teens who take so-called stimulant drugs to treat Attention Deficit
Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) are helped by the medications, becoming
better able to focus and less hyperactive, impulsive and disruptive,
according to a new report from Consumer Reports Best Buy Drugs.
But the report strongly cautions that an ADHD diagnosis is
difficult and that many children and teens taking stimulants today
either do not have ADHD or have only mild symptoms that may not warrant
drug treatment. Parents should get a careful diagnosis of their child
and a second opinion if they have doubts, the report advises.
The report, available free to the public at
www.CRBestBuyDrugs.org,
also recommends adults be equally cautious before taking stimulants for
ADHD since medical evidence is lacking on whether the drugs indeed help
adults.
“These medicines are effective when used appropriately, but they
should be prescribed only for people who really need them.” says Marvin
M. Lipman, MD, medical editor of Consumer Reports magazine. “The jury
is out so far on whether adults really benefit from treatment with
them.”
The new report is based on an independent, scientific review of
available medical evidence by the Drug Effectiveness Review Project, a
14-state initiative based at the Oregon Health & Science
University. The initiative compares drugs on effectiveness and safety
for state Medicaid programs.
Consumer Reports Best Buy Drugs combines those reviews with
available medical and pricing information to identify Best Buys in each
category. The Web site features free, easy-to-understand reports that
discuss safety, side effects, effectiveness and price. Every drug
report also is peer-reviewed by medical experts in the particular
category.
“In recent years we have seen a surge in the use of attention
deficit drugs, so parents and patients are sorely in need of
independent information about their effectiveness,” Lipman says.
Among people aged 20 to 64, prescriptions for ADHD drugs have
doubled between 2000 and 2004, according to a recent study by Medco
Health Solutions of those enrolled in its pharmacy benefit programs.
The study found that 1 percent of adults with health insurance were
taking such drugs, up from 0.5 percent in 2000.
A separate study by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) found that 8 percent of children aged 4 to17 have been diagnosed
with ADHD in 2003; about half were taking medicines for the disorder.
The new report took effectiveness, safety, cost, dosing convenience,
and duration of action into account when identifying Best Buy Drugs for
ADHD:
• Methylphenidate tablets – 5mg, 10mg and 20mg
• Methylphenidate sustained release tablets or capsules (Metadate ER, Metadate CD, and Methylin ER) – 10mg, 20mg, 30mg
• Dextroamphetamine tablets – 5mg, 10mg
• Dextroamphetamine sustained release or long-acting tablets – 5mg, 10mg and 15mg
These medicines have been tested by time, and are available in low- or
moderate-cost generic or “branded” generic forms. Their monthly cost
ranges from to . Many of the brand name drugs for ADHD cost 0
a month and up, and are no more effective.
Stimulant drugs, including the Best Buys, come in short- and
long-acting formulations. That’s especially important with the ADHD
drugs because dosing convenience (one pill a day instead of two, three
or more) and the period of time a stimulant pill is active in the body
are critical elements of ADHD treatment.
Duration of action in the body is also a selling point of many of
the newer and more expensive brand-name ADHD drugs, some of which have
been heavily advertised to consumers.
The report concludes that other types of drugs sometimes used to
treat ADHD, such as antidepressants and antipsychotics, lack proof of
effectiveness in treating it and should be used with caution.
Parents of older teens and college students are urged to be alert
to their children’s use of stimulants without a prescription. The
medicines are increasingly being taken by students who do not have
ADHD, to increase mental alertness and help them stay awake at night to
study. Such use can be habit-forming.
Since December, Consumer Reports Best Buy Drugs has released
reports on eight widely-used categories of prescription drugs to date,
with a new report each month. The project is designed to help patients,
with their doctors, find effective, safe, and affordable medicines, and
is supported by the Engelberg Foundation, a private philanthropy, and
the National Library of Medicine.
CRBestBuyDrugs.org has just been revised. The free Web site now
contains downloadable summary versions of drug reports in Spanish and
English as well as other materials prepared originally in print for the
project’s outreach campaign. In addition, the revised site offers
initial guidance to Medicare beneficiaries who will soon be faced with
choosing a drug benefit.
www.CRBestBuyDrugs.org