Johnstone Jeanette M, Leung Brenda, Gracious Barbara, Perez Leanna, Tost Gabriella, Savoy Andrew, Hatsu Irene, Hughes Andrew, Bruton Alisha, Arnold L Eugene
National University of Natural Medicine, Helfgott Research Institute, Portland, OR, USA.
Department of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA.
Contemp Clin Trials Commun. 2019 Oct 26;16:100478. doi: 10.1016/j.conctc.2019.100478. eCollection 2019 Dec.
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is a chronic neurodevelopmental disorder affecting up to 9% of children and substantial numbers of adults. Existing pharmacologic treatments often improve symptoms, but concerns exist over side effects, stigma, potential long-term health effects, and residual irritability, often treated with adjunctive antipsychotics. To address public and clinician demand for non-pharmacologic evidence-based treatments, this study will examine efficacy of a 36-ingredient micronutrient (vitamin/mineral) supplement as treatment for children with ADHD and irritability.
An international team of experts in ADHD, mood dysregulation, nutrition, epidemiology, and clinical trials conferred to develop/refine a protocol powered to detect a medium effect. The study will employ a fully-blind randomized controlled trial (RCT) design, comparing the micronutrient supplement to matched placebo in 135 children aged 6-12 with ADHD symptoms and irritability, based on the parent-rated Child and Adolescent Symptom Inventory-5 (CASI-5). Irritability will be measured by at least one symptom of oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) or disruptive mood dysregulation disorder (DMDD). Based on research suggesting an irritable ADHD subtype, the primary outcome will be a composite score comprised of the CASI-5 subscales: ADHD, ODD, DMDD, and the Peer Conflict Scale, which assesses anger and aggression perpetrated towards peers. Participants will provide biological samples (blood, urine, saliva, hair and stool) to explore the micronutrients' mechanisms of action.
This study is the first adequately powered RCT in North America to examine both behavioral responses to, and biological mechanisms of, micronutrients for ADHD and irritability in children. If found efficacious, broad-spectrum micronutrients, given at therapeutic doses, may provide an evidence-based alternative to prescription medications for ADHD and associated irritability.
NCT03252522. Registered 26 July 2017.
注意力缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)是一种慢性神经发育障碍,影响着多达9%的儿童以及相当数量的成年人。现有的药物治疗通常能改善症状,但人们对副作用、污名化、潜在的长期健康影响以及残留的易怒情绪存在担忧,这些残留的易怒情绪通常用辅助抗精神病药物治疗。为了满足公众和临床医生对基于非药物证据的治疗方法的需求,本研究将检验一种含有36种成分的微量营养素(维生素/矿物质)补充剂对患有ADHD和易怒情绪的儿童的治疗效果。
一个由ADHD、情绪失调、营养、流行病学和临床试验方面的国际专家团队共同商讨制定/完善了一项有足够效力以检测中等效应的方案。该研究将采用完全盲法随机对照试验(RCT)设计,基于家长评定的儿童青少年症状量表-5(CASI-5),将微量营养素补充剂与匹配的安慰剂在135名6至12岁有ADHD症状和易怒情绪的儿童中进行比较。易怒情绪将通过对立违抗障碍(ODD)或破坏性行为障碍(DMDD)的至少一种症状来衡量。基于表明存在易怒型ADHD亚型的研究,主要结局将是一个由CASI-5分量表组成的综合得分:ADHD、ODD、DMDD以及同伴冲突量表,该量表评估对同伴的愤怒和攻击行为。参与者将提供生物样本(血液、尿液、唾液、头发和粪便)以探究微量营养素的作用机制。
本研究是北美首个有足够效力的RCT,旨在研究微量营养素对儿童ADHD和易怒情绪的行为反应及生物学机制。如果发现有效,以治疗剂量给予的广谱微量营养素可能为ADHD及相关易怒情绪的处方药提供一种基于证据的替代方案。
NCT03252522。于2017年7月26日注册。