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Medications in Young Children: Evidence, Best Practices, and Getting there from Here. Peter S. Jensen, MD President & CEO. The REACH Institute Co-Chair, Division of Child Psychiatry & Psychology The MAYO CLINIC. Evidence for Medications in C&A Disorders. STRONG. ADHD Stimulants TCAs
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Medications in Young Children: Evidence, Best Practices, and Getting there from Here Peter S. Jensen, MDPresident & CEO The REACH Institute Co-Chair, Division of Child Psychiatry & Psychology The MAYO CLINIC
Evidence for Medications in C&A Disorders STRONG • ADHD Stimulants • TCAs • ATX MODERATE • DEPRESSION SSRIs • AUTISM Antipsychotics • OCD SSRIs, TCAs • ODD/CD/Agg Antipsychotics, Mood stabilizers, Stimulants • ANXIETY SSRIs • BIPOLAR/SZ Atypicalss WEAK • BIPOLAR Lithium • TOURETTE’S Antipsychotics
Barriers vs. “Promoters” to Delivery of Effective Services (Jensen, 2000) Three Levels: Child & Family Factors: e.g., Access & Acceptance Provider/Organization Factors: e.g., Skills, Use of EB Systemic and Societal Factors: e.g., Organiz., Funding Policies EfficaciousTreatments “Effective” Services
% “Normalized” at 14-month EndpointMTA Groups vs. Classroom Controls 88% 68% 56% 34% 25% MTA N = 579, Classroom Cntrls N = 288 1. MTA Co-operative Group Arch Gen Psychiatry 1999 56: 1073–1086
14-Month Outcomes Teacher SNAP-Inattention Average Score Assessment Point (Days)
Would You Recommend Treatment? (parent) Medmgt Comb Beh Not recommend 9% 3% 5% Neutral 9% 1% 2% Slightly Recommend 4% 2% 2% Recommend 35% 15% 24% Strongly recommend 43% 79% 67%
Teacher-Rated Inattention(CC Children Separated By Med Use) Key Differences, MedMgt vs. CC: Initial Titration Dose Dose Frequency #Visits/year Length of Visits Contact w/schools
Case StudyNew York Times, 2007 (Carey) • 4 year-old girl • ADHD + Bipolar diagnosis age 2 • Seroquel (atypical AP) • Depakoate (mood stabilizer/seizure agent • Clonidine • No studies of any of these agents in children under age 6
Trends over Time in Preschool Prescribing • Minde, 1997: US and Canada • 3-fold increases in Methylphenidate • 10-fold increases in SSRIs • Zito 2000 • State Medicaid claims, 2 states • 1.5% of children ages 2-5, significant increases over time • 28-fold increases in clonidine • 3-fold increases in MPH • Recent increases in atypicals in preschoolers • Majority of preschool meds – stimulants • Most preschoolers w/behavior problems get therapy only
Case Example:ADHD in Preschoolers • DSM-IV criteria same in younger children • Triad of impulsivity, inattention, hyperactivity • Developmental considerations • Clinical presentation • Frequent comorbidity (74%) – Wilens et al., 2002) • CD, ODD, Anxiety • Only 19% received services (Pavuluri et al., 1996)
PATS: The Preschool ADHD Treatment Study • Only one dozen small trials in preschool children, total N = 417 (Ghuman et al., 2008) • Variable results, increased side effects • Sadness, irritability, clinging, insomnia, anorexia • PATS intended to fill the gap of information in a sufficiently large trial
PATS: The Preschool ADHD Treatment Study • 8 phase study, 70 weeks • 303 preschool children ages 3-5.5 yrs • All began with 10 week group parent training • 70% comorbidity • Increased ADHD severity linked to anxiety, depression • Non-responders eligible for next phase (MPH), N = 165 • Graduated dose-response, 14.2mg/day MPH
PATS: The Preschool ADHD Treatment Study • 2.5, 5, and 7.5mg given t.i.d. • Effect sizes smaller than older children • Less weight gain -1.32 kg/year among medicated children • Less height gain -1.38 cm/year among medicated children • No serious side effects • Irritability, outbursts, DFA, reduced appetite • Slower renal clearance than older children • Multiple comorbidities – little or no response • 140 children complete 10 months, 45 discontinue meds
PATS: The Preschool ADHD Treatment Study Study month
Other Preschool ADHD Studies • Atomoxetine (Strattera) open study given to 22 5-6 year olds • Apparent benefits, 1.25mg/kg/day • No serious side effects • Role of psychosocial treatments paramount • Possible benefit of combination approaches, especially innovative new therapy approaches • Some evidence for dietary approaches
Preschool ADHD Therapy Studies • Family factors critical to ADHD outcomes • Negative or inconsistent parenting, harsh discipline, or high levels of family adversity • However, only 7.2% of 261 PATS families benefited significantly from PT alone • Home-based parent training using innovative approaches more effective than medication at 1 year (Sonuga-Barke et al., 2001)
Guidelines Relevant Medication Use in Preschoolers • Practice Parameters for Psychiatric Assessment of Infants & Toddlers (AACAP, 1997) • Establishing a working alliance • Reasons for referral • Developmental history • Family relational history • Clinical observation • Standardized tools • Mental status exam • Interdisciplinary assessment & referral • Diagnostic formulation • Treatment planning
Guidelines Relevant to Medication Use in Preschoolers Practice Parameters for Use of Psychotropic Medications in C&A (AACAP, 2009) • Before starting meds, do complete psychiatric evaluation • Before starting meds, do med Hx and evaluation • Communicate w/other professionals to plan/coordinate care • Develop psychosocial and pharmacologic treatment plan • Develop/implement short- and long-term monitoring plan • Be cautious when implementing plan that can’t be monitored
Guidelines Relevant to Medication Use in Preschoolers Practice Parameters for Use of Psychotropic Medications in C&A (AACAP, 2009) (continued) • Complete and document assess and consent • Discuss risks and benefits • Use adequate dose and duration • Reassess for incomplete or non-response • Provide clear rationale for medication combinations • Discontinuation requires clear plan
Guidelines Relevant to Medication Use in Preschoolers • Psychopharmacologic Treatment for Very Young Children Contexts and Guidelines (Gleason et al., 2007) • Avoid meds when therapy is likely to be helpful • Precede meds with an adequate trial of therapy • Continue psychotherapy even when meds are used • ADHD Algorithm stages • STAGE 0 DIAGNOSTIC EVAL AND THERAPY TRIAL • STAGE 1 PHARMACOLOGIC TRIAL (MPH) • STAGE 2 AMPHETAMINE TRIAL • STAGE 3 ALPHA AGONIST OR ATOMOXETINE
Guidelines Relevant to Medication Use in Preschoolers • Psychopharmacologic Treatment for Very Young Children Contexts and Guidelines (Gleason et al., 2007) • DISRUPTIVE DISORDER Algorithm stages • STAGE 0 DIAGNOSTIC EVAL • STAGE 1 NON-PHARMACOLOGIC INTERVENTIONS • STAGE 2 RISPERIDONE TRIAL, CONTINUE THERAPY • DEPRESSIVE DISORDER Algorithm stages • STAGE 0 DIAGNOSTIC EVAL • STAGE 1 NON-PHARMACOLOGIC INTERVENTIONS • STAGE 2 SSRI TRIAL(S), CONTINUE THERAPY
Guidelines Relevant to Medication Use in Preschoolers • Psychopharmacologic Treatment for Very Young Children Contexts and Guidelines (Gleason et al., 2007) • BIPOLAR DISORDER Algorithm stages • STAGE 0 DIAGNOSTIC EVAL • STAGE 1 NON-PHARMACOLOGIC INTERVENTIONS • STAGE 2 MEDICATION TRIAL(S), CONTINUE THERAPY • NOT RECOMMENDED: MEDS W/O THERAPY • ANXIETY DISORDER Algorithm stages • STAGE 0 DIAGNOSTIC EVAL • STAGE 1 NON-PHARMACOLOGIC INTERVENTIONS • STAGE 2 FLUOXETINE TRIAL, CONTINUE THERAPY • STAGE 3 FLUVOXAMINE TRIAL, CONTINUE THERAPY
Guidelines Relevant to Medication Use in Preschoolers • Psychopharmacologic Treatment for Very Young Children Contexts and Guidelines (Gleason et al., 2007) • PDD DISORDERS Algorithm stages • STAGE 0 DIAGNOSTIC EVAL • STAGE 1 NON-PHARMACOLOGIC INTERVENTIONS • STAGE 2 MEDICATION TRIAL(S), CONTINUE THERAPY • SLEEP DISORDERS Algorithm stages • STAGE 0 DIAGNOSTIC EVAL • STAGE 1 NON-PHARMACOLOGIC INTERVENTIONS • STAGE 2 MELATONIN TRIAL, CONTINUE THERAPY • STAGE 3 CLONIDINE TRIAL, CONTINUE THERAPY
The PROBLEM: • Desperate parents & preschools • Limited resources • Need for effective education of providers • Current CME methods ineffective • Educational materials (e.g., distribution of recommendations for clinical care, including practice guidelines, AV materials, and electronic publications) • Didactic educational meetings
Effective Provider & Organizational Interventions: • Educational outreach visits • Reminders (manual or computerized) • Multifaceted interventions • Sustained, interactive educational meetings (participation of providers in workshops that include discussion and practice) Bero et al, 1998
Dissemination and Adoption of New Interventions • Sustained Interpersonal contact • Organizational support • Persistent championship of the intervention • Adaptability of the intervention to local situations • Availability of credible evidence of success • Ongoing technical assistance, consultation
Implications re: Changing Provider Behaviors • Changing professional performance is complex - internal, external, and enabling factors • No “magic bullets” to change practice in all circumstances and settings (Oxman, 1995) • Multifaceted interventions targeting different barriers more effective than single interventions (Davis, 1999) • Consensus guidelines approach necessary, but not sufficient. • Lack of fit w/HCP’s mental models
Many proven treatments now available but… Information is not getting to families, health care providers and schools It takes anywhere from 15-20 years for a proven intervention to reach a PCC who will use it to treat your child Information and assistance needs to be Family friendly Guided by family input and experience Science-based Practical and hands-on End Result: Families not getting the evidence-based assistance they need
Scarcity of Child Psychiatry Boutique practices Differences in care based on ability to pay Pseudo-Stradavarius model vs. High quality production model 6000 CAPs, 5000 active, for 7 million children: 1,400 children per CAP, vs. 50-200 seen per year 10 hours/year spread across 2000 hours = 200 children Only 1 in 7 children seen by CAPs -- 14%. If all CAPs time were spread equally across all children in need = 1.5 hours child… (four 15’ med-checks/year) Alternatives? Manpower Problems
Diagnostic practices Unreliability of individual clinicians Variabilty of diagnostic and treatment practices 8-fold increases in bipolar Polypharmacy Lack of dissemination of EBPs (Evidence-based practices) Failure to use EBAIs(evidence-based assessments & interventions) Novice families don’t know how to discriminate quality! Relationship key, but only partial indicator of quality Alternative Solutions? Quality Problems
Accelerating this process: The REsource for Advancing Children’s Health: The REACH Institute
The REACH Institute ~ Putting Science to Work ~ The Institute was established in the spring of 2006 to accelerate the acceptance and effective use of proven interventions that foster children’s emotional and behavioral health. REACH fills a uniquerole by: • Promoting a family-oriented approach to mental health care • Developing partnerships with parents, pediatricians, APRNs, schools, and others to apply best practices and proven interventions • Providing “hands-on” assistance to partners • Focusing on Key Disorder Areas
Training in What? • Parent/Family Level: Parent Facilitators • Clinician Level: Increasing positive and/or proven practices, reducing potentially harmful, unnecessary/expensive practices • Brief Psychotherapy manuals and training on treatment for anxiety, depression, trauma, and conduct problems • Pediatric Psychopharmacology Mini-fellowship • Engagement training • EB Assessments/Diagnosis • Systems Level: consultation & reorganization
Training, But How? • CME and “hit and run” workshops generally ineffective • Training needs to address issues and obstacles that are likely to be encountered at ALL THREE levels • Collaborative learning partnership approaches, vs. one-down relationships
Recommended methods for assisting health care staff in adopting EBPs
Step 1 Step 2 • Identify and Validate • Identify key problem areas w/partners • Obtain consensus & commitment on the latest, most effective interventions derived from rigorous research • Adapt • Make interventions “user-,” “patient-” and “family-friendly” • …so they can be readily applied by patients, families, and health care professionals Step 4 • Empower • Strategic partners carry forward the mission to their own organization members, to enable proven interventions to reach the most kids in the shortest time Step 3 • Distribute, Apply and Evaluate • Use strategic learning partnerships • Reach as many children as possible in a credible and effective way • Evaluate, feed results back into Step 2 REACH Approach: A 4-step process
Training Approach • Hands-on, with role plays and extensive practice • Can be done “on-site” or at national locations • 2 day’s face-to-face training with 15-30 clinicians, with 2-3 trainers, followed by: • 6 months of twice-monthly phone call consultation and support, 1-1.5 hours/call • Individual case presentations, with peer learning
Training Benefits • Graduates report improved staff morale, decreased staff burn-out and turn--over • Risk management & quality assurance • Decreased no-show rates, improved billing • Increased treatment efficacy and improved family/student/client satisfaction • Enhanced value-added of current services • “Excellence” certificates for clinicians & educators after completing training
Deliver family-centered, effective care Assist pediatricians and family practitioners to manage youth depression and suicide risk Help doctors in managing treating ADHD and Depression, and avoiding over-diagnosis Help doctors get the right information to patients and families Pediatric Psychopharmacology Program – A “Mini-Fellowship” 6 months’ training and support Example 1: Primary Care Providers: “Best Practices” Partner with doctors and APRNs to identify and implement “Best Practices.”
Example 2: Helping Therapists Apply “EBPs” Training Partnerships with counselors and psychotherapists to apply CBT, IPT, Engagement Strategies, BT • Uniform ‘look and feel’: same introduction, supporting documentation (CBT) and introductory session. • Manuals share similar session structure, graphics and session markers • One year of supervision • Organizational Partnership • Evaluation Partnership
REACH’s Integrated Psychotherapy Consortium • Anxiety: Tom Ollendick, Ron Rapee, Wendy Silverman • Depression: Kevin Stark, John Curry • Disruptive: John Lochman, Karen Wells • PTSD: Chris Layne, William Saltzman • Consultant: Bruce Chorpita • REACH Institute: Peter Jensen, Eliot Goldman, Kimberly Hoagwood
The REACH - Integrated Psychotherapy Approach • Manuals originally developed for Project Liberty (mental health response to 9/11 trauma) • Intervention geared to children & adolescents with mild/moderate sx • 4 areas of intervention (anxiety, depression, disruptive & PTSD) • Adapted from evidence based tx developed by nationally recognized experts
Begin Aggression PTSD Depression Anxiety Optional Sessions Termination Session End
Common techniques to aid in training and clinical applicability • Problem solving • Social skills • Family sessions • Setting goals • Organizational skills
Session Markers 5 minutes Timed Section Exercise Graphic Also sample language, session goals
Example 3: Engagement Training • Explicit problem-solving approach applied by health care team concerning the family’s perceived obstacles to care • Tailoring to fit specific needs and family values • Respect of mutual expertise • Encouragement of ventilation of concerns & questions • Dramatic reductions in no-show rates • Increased effects with psychoeducation, also increased satisfaction and compliance • SAVES CLINIC AND CLINICIAN TIME!
Example 4: Parent Empowerment Training • Uses Professional Parent Advocates to model and teach parents how to navigate the system, advocate for their child, and get high quality evidence-based care • Promote parent/provider partnerships • Increase parent knowledge about mental health needs and evidenced based service delivery options • Increase parent self efficacy • Improve parent communication and assertiveness skills