Lara Carmen, Fayyad John, de Graaf Ron, Kessler Ronald C, Aguilar-Gaxiola Sergio, Angermeyer Matthias, Demytteneare Koen, de Girolamo Giovanni, Haro Josep Maria, Jin Robert, Karam Elie G, Lépine Jean-Pierre, Mora Maria Elena Medina, Ormel Johan, Posada-Villa José, Sampson Nancy
Department of Psychiatry, Autonomous University of Puebla, Puebla, Mexico.
Biol Psychiatry. 2009 Jan 1;65(1):46-54. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2008.10.005. Epub 2008 Nov 12.
Although it is known that childhood attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) often persists into adulthood, childhood predictors of this persistence have not been widely studied.
Childhood history of ADHD and adult ADHD were assessed in 10 countries in the World Health Organization World Mental Health Surveys. Logistic regression analysis was used to study associations of retrospectively reported childhood risk factors with adult persistence among the 629 adult respondents with childhood ADHD. Risk factors included age; sex; childhood ADHD symptom profiles, severity, and treatment; comorbid child/adolescent DSM-IV disorders; childhood family adversities; and child/adolescent exposure to traumatic events.
An average of 50% of children with ADHD (range: 32.8%-84.1% across countries) continued to meet DSM-IV criteria for ADHD as adults. Persistence was strongly related to childhood ADHD symptom profile (highest persistence associated with the attentional plus impulsive-hyperactive type, odds ratio [OR]=12.4, compared with the lowest associated with the impulsive-hyperactive type), symptom severity (OR=2.0), comorbid major depressive disorder (MDD; OR=2.2), high comorbidity (>or=3 child/adolescent disorders in addition to ADHD; OR=1.7), paternal (but not maternal) anxiety mood disorder (OR=2.4), and parental antisocial personality disorder (OR=2.2). A multivariate risk profile of these variables significantly predicts persistence of ADHD into adulthood (area under the receiving operator characteristic curve=.76).
A substantial proportion of children with ADHD continue to meet full criteria for ADHD as adults. A multivariate risk index comprising variables that can be assessed in adolescence predicts persistence with good accuracy.
尽管已知儿童注意力缺陷/多动障碍(ADHD)常常持续至成年期,但针对这种持续性的儿童期预测因素尚未得到广泛研究。
在世界卫生组织世界精神卫生调查的10个国家中,对ADHD的儿童期病史和成人ADHD进行了评估。采用逻辑回归分析,研究629名有儿童期ADHD的成年受访者中,回顾性报告的儿童期风险因素与成人期持续性之间的关联。风险因素包括年龄、性别、儿童期ADHD症状特征、严重程度及治疗情况、共病的儿童/青少年精神疾病诊断与统计手册第四版(DSM-IV)障碍、儿童期家庭逆境,以及儿童/青少年期遭受的创伤性事件。
平均而言,50%的ADHD儿童(各国范围为32.8% - 84.1%)成年后仍符合ADHD的DSM-IV标准。持续性与儿童期ADHD症状特征密切相关(注意力不集中加冲动多动型的持续性最高,优势比[OR]=12.4,相比之下冲动多动型的持续性最低)、症状严重程度(OR=2.0)、共病的重度抑郁症(MDD;OR=2.2)、高共病率(除ADHD外还有≥3种儿童/青少年疾病;OR=1.7)、父亲(而非母亲)的焦虑情绪障碍(OR=2.4)以及父母的反社会人格障碍(OR=2.2)。这些变量的多因素风险概况能显著预测ADHD持续至成年期(受试者工作特征曲线下面积 = 0.76)。
相当一部分ADHD儿童成年后仍完全符合ADHD标准。一个包含可在青少年期评估的变量的多因素风险指数能较为准确地预测持续性。