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Effects of stimulant medication on growth rates across 3 years in the MTA follow-up

  • James M. Swanson
  • , Glen R. Elliott
  • , Laurence L. Greenhill
  • , Timothy Wigal
  • , L. Eugene Arnold
  • , Benedetto Vitiello
  • , Lily Hechtman
  • , Jeffery N. Epstein
  • , William E. Pelham
  • , Howard B. Abikoff
  • , Jeffrey H. Newcorn
  • , Brooke S.G. Molina
  • , Stephen P. Hinshaw
  • , Karen C. Wells
  • , Betsy Hoza
  • , Peter S. Jensen
  • , Robert D. Gibbons
  • , Kwan Hur
  • , Annamarie Stehli
  • , Mark Davies
  • John S. March, C. Keith Conners, Mark Caron, Nora D. Volkow

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

285 Scopus citations

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the hypothesis of stimulant medication effect on physical growth in the follow-up phase of the Multimodal Treatment Study of Children With ADHD. METHOD: Naturalistic subgroups were established based on patterns of treatment with stimulant medication at baseline, 14-, 24-, and 36-month assessments: not medicated (n = 65), newly medicated (n = 88), consistently medicated (n = 70), and inconsistently medicated (n = 147). Analysis of variance was used to evaluate effects of subgroup and assessment time on measures of relative size (z scores) obtained from growth norms. RESULTS: The subgroup x assessment time interaction was significant for z height (p <.005) and z weight (p <.0001), due primarily to divergence of the newly medicated and the not medicated subgroups. These initially stimulant-naïve subgroups had z scores significantly >0 at baseline. The newly medicated subgroup showed decreases in relative size that reached asymptotes by the 36-month assessment, when this group showed average growth of 2.0 cm and 2.7 kg less than the not medicated subgroup, which showed slight increases in relative size. CONCLUSIONS: Stimulant-naïve school-age children with Combined type attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder were, as a group, larger than expected from norms before treatment but show stimulant-related decreases in growth rates after initiation of treatment, which appeared to reach asymptotes within 3 years without evidence of growth rebound. Copyright 2007

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1015-1027
Number of pages13
JournalJournal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Volume46
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2007

Keywords

  • Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
  • Growth
  • Long-term outcome
  • Methylphenidate
  • Side effects

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