Late-Onset ADHD Reconsidered With Comprehensive Repeated Assessments Between Ages 10 and 25

Margaret H Sibley, Luis A Rohde, James M Swanson, Lily T Hechtman, Brooke S G Molina, John T Mitchell, L Eugene Arnold, Arthur Caye, Traci M Kennedy, Arunima Roy, Annamarie Stehli, Multimodal Treatment Study of Children with ADHD (MTA) Cooperative Group, Margaret H Sibley, Luis A Rohde, James M Swanson, Lily T Hechtman, Brooke S G Molina, John T Mitchell, L Eugene Arnold, Arthur Caye, Traci M Kennedy, Arunima Roy, Annamarie Stehli, Multimodal Treatment Study of Children with ADHD (MTA) Cooperative Group

Abstract

Objective: Adolescents and young adults without childhood attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) often present to clinics seeking stimulant medication for late-onset ADHD symptoms. Recent birth-cohort studies support the notion of late-onset ADHD, but these investigations are limited by relying on screening instruments to assess ADHD, not considering alternative causes of symptoms, or failing to obtain complete psychiatric histories. The authors address these limitations by examining psychiatric assessments administered longitudinally to the local normative comparison group of the Multimodal Treatment Study of ADHD.

Method: Individuals without childhood ADHD (N=239) were administered eight assessments from comparison baseline (mean age=9.89 years) to young adulthood (mean age=24.40 years). Diagnostic procedures utilized parent, teacher, and self-reports of ADHD symptoms, impairment, substance use, and other mental disorders, with consideration of symptom context and timing.

Results: Approximately 95% of individuals who initially screened positive on symptom checklists were excluded from late-onset ADHD diagnosis. Among individuals with impairing late-onset ADHD symptoms, the most common reason for diagnostic exclusion was symptoms or impairment occurring exclusively in the context of heavy substance use. Most late-onset cases displayed onset in adolescence and an adolescence-limited presentation. There was no evidence for adult-onset ADHD independent of a complex psychiatric history.

Conclusions: Individuals seeking treatment for late-onset ADHD may be valid cases; however, more commonly, symptoms represent nonimpairing cognitive fluctuations, a comorbid disorder, or the cognitive effects of substance use. False positive late-onset ADHD cases are common without careful assessment. Clinicians should carefully assess impairment, psychiatric history, and substance use before treating potential late-onset cases.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00000388.

Keywords: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder; Diagnosis And Classification.

Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of Interest Disclosures: The remaining authors have no conflicts to disclose.

Figures

Figure 1. Adolescence-Limited ADHD Cases: Symptom Counts…
Figure 1. Adolescence-Limited ADHD Cases: Symptom Counts according to Parent, Teacher, Self, and Combined Reports at each Available Assessment Point
Note. Symptoms in the shaded region exceed DSM-5 age-specific symptom thresholds. Childhood Health and Behavioral History was reported retrospectively at baseline. Substance use and mental health diagnoses were obtained from the parent and self DISC interview. P=Parent report, T=Teacher Report, S=Self Report. Bold lines represent combined report across raters using an “or” rule. For Case B, symptom duration was assessed by consulting the self-DISC interview.
Figure 1. Adolescence-Limited ADHD Cases: Symptom Counts…
Figure 1. Adolescence-Limited ADHD Cases: Symptom Counts according to Parent, Teacher, Self, and Combined Reports at each Available Assessment Point
Note. Symptoms in the shaded region exceed DSM-5 age-specific symptom thresholds. Childhood Health and Behavioral History was reported retrospectively at baseline. Substance use and mental health diagnoses were obtained from the parent and self DISC interview. P=Parent report, T=Teacher Report, S=Self Report. Bold lines represent combined report across raters using an “or” rule. For Case B, symptom duration was assessed by consulting the self-DISC interview.
Figure 2. Adolescent-Onset Persistent ADHD Cases: Symptom…
Figure 2. Adolescent-Onset Persistent ADHD Cases: Symptom Counts according to Parent, Teacher, Self, and Combined Reports at each Available Assessment Point
Note. Symptoms in the shaded region exceed DSM-5 age-specific symptom thresholds. Childhood Health and Behavioral History was reported retrospectively at baseline. Substance use and mental health diagnoses were obtained from the parent and self DISC interview. P=Parent report, T=Teacher Report, S=Self Report. Bold lines represent combined report across raters using an “or” rule. One voter dissented for the inclusion of Case E.
Figure 3. Adult-Onset ADHD Case: Symptom Counts…
Figure 3. Adult-Onset ADHD Case: Symptom Counts according to Parent, Teacher, Self, and Combined Reports at each Available Assessment Point
Note. For Case G, ADHD symptoms reported at age 13.46 and 15.15 were deemed by a panel of clinical experts to be attributable to other mental disorders (anxiety disorders and mania). As a result, onset of symptoms that appear unattributable to other disorders occurs at 21.05 years. Symptoms in the shaded region exceed DSM-5 age-specific symptom thresholds. Childhood Health and Behavioral History was reported retrospectively at baseline. Substance use and mental health diagnoses were obtained from the parent and self DISC interview. P=Parent report, T=Teacher Report, S=Self Report. Bold lines represent combined report across raters using an “or” rule. Two voters dissented for the inclusion of Case G based on symptom presence at age 21.05. For cases G and H, symptom duration was reported to be over six months on the DISC interview.

Source: PubMed

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