Psychiatric and neurological predictors of early ADHD medication discontinuation across the lifespan: a multinational study
Isabell Brikell, Aske Astrup, Theresa Wimberley, Masako Araki, Zheng Chang, Ditte Demontis, Zihan Dong, Stephen V Faraone, Le Gao, Malcolm B Gillies, Jan Haavik, Catharina Hartman, Henrik Larsson, Kenneth K C Man, Sallie-Anne Pearson, Harold Snieder, Melissa Vos, Ian C K Wong, Honghui Yao, Andrew SC Yuen, Yanli Zhang-James, Yiling Zhou, Helga Zoega, Anders Engeland, Søren Dalsgaard, Kari KlungsøyrBackground
Early discontinuation of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) medication is common and linked to worse outcomes. Identifying clinical predictors could aid personalised treatment yet evidence is inconsistent across ages and countries/regions.
Objective
Investigate psychiatric and neurological comorbidity as predictors of early ADHD medication discontinuation in new ADHD medication users across age groups, sex and countries/regions.
Methods
Using health records from eight countries/regions, we identified 1 000 411 (44% female) new ADHD medication users (2011–2020). Discontinuation was defined as a ≥180 day gap between dispensations. We examined 23 indicators of psychiatric or neurological comorbidity, severity and psychotropic medication use. Associations were estimated using Cox regression, pooled with random-effects meta-analyses and stratified by age-at-initiation and sex.
Findings
Discontinuation rates varied widely (children 19%–61%, adolescents 37%–68%, young adults 52–67%, adults 38%–68%). In pooled analyses, earlier discontinuation in children was predicted by intellectual disability, autism and use of psychotropic medications (HR range 1.32–1.51), while conduct/oppositional defiant disorder (CD/ODD) was protective (HR 0.83, 95% CI 0.73 to 0.94). In adolescents, no indicators remained statistically significant after multiple-testing control. In young adults, CD/ODD (HR 1.42, 95% CI 1.30 to 1.55), and in adults, schizophrenia (HR 1.25, 95% CI 1.09 to 1.44) and tic disorders (HR 1.27, 95% CI 1.11 to 1.46) predicted earlier discontinuation. Statistical heterogeneity was substantial, largely driven by US estimates. In meta-analyses excluding the USA, additional associations emerged. For example, in children, OCD and anxiety disorders predicted earlier discontinuation, while eating disorders and antidepressants/anxiolytics were protective in adults. Associations with schizophrenia, tic disorders and CD/ODD were no longer significant. Country-specific analyses showed similar association patterns, except in the USA, Hong Kong and the UK. Sex differences were limited.
Conclusions
Children with neuropsychiatric comorbidity and related comedication are more likely to discontinue ADHD medication early, whereas few consistent predictors were seen from adolescence onwards. Marked cross-country variation, particularly in the USA, points to system-level influences on treatment patterns.
Clinical implications
Improving ADHD medication persistence will require consideration of healthcare context and age-specific strategies, including close monitoring for children with complex neuropsychiatric profiles, and consideration of broader factors in adolescents and adults, where clinical predictors were limited.