Conference Coverage

Taking a drug holiday: Benefits and risks to children with ADHD


 

FROM ADHD 2021

‘Negative things can happen’

The downside of drug holidays is parents may rationalize that their child is doing fine without the medication, and discontinue it. The process of stopping and starting medication can lead to other problems. “Negative things can happen during drug holidays,” said Dr. Hechtman.

The large variability of doses over the weekend can result in rebound and side effects.

A child may go from a full dose, which could be 50-60 mg of stimulant to zero from Friday to Saturday. As a result they have a lot of rebound on that Saturday. Similarly, they go from zero on Sunday to full dose on the Monday, causing lots of side effects. “Also, they will never have a stable effective dose because of the roller-coaster effect of being on and off the drugs,” she noted.

The lack of consistency and accommodation to the side effects can lead to discontinuation of the medication.

Off medication, the child may be more accident prone or have more injuries. “Their behavior off the medication may be such that it leads to social problems,” Dr. Hechtman continued. Weekend activities that require medication such as homework or school projects, family or religious gatherings, or sports and social activities with family and peers may be affected. If the child is behaving poorly off the medication, they may be expelled from such activities. If it’s a summer drug holiday, they may get kicked out of camp or the swimming pool.

If the child’s condition is already worsening, and a drug holiday takes place on top of this, the child may experience a rebound or relapse, in which the condition looks a lot worse than it did with the drugs.

Do drug holidays matter?

Another session speaker, James Swanson, PhD, who noted that the “emergence of tolerance may limit and eventually undermine initial relative benefit” of stimulants, said there may be instances in which drug holidays may be impractical.

Given the poor adherence to ADHD medication, “most treated ADHD cases stop medication anyway and these patients do not have an opportunity for drug holidays,” he said in an interview.

“If tolerance does emerge, then for long-term treatment the concept of drug holiday seems difficult to evaluate to me,” said Dr. Swanson, director of the Child Development Center at the University of California, Irvine.

Planned medication breaks may not be a good way to evaluate efficacy unless it is performed under “double-blind” conditions, he offered. The MTA used an approach of switching between short periods of time, with and without medication. “We did this to compare medication to placebo and to compare doses of medication to optimize the short-term benefit,” said Dr. Swanson, a coauthor of the MTA study.

Dr. Hechtman receives funding from The Canadian Institutes of Health Research. Dr. Swanson has two patents: (PIXA4), which uses a “time-of-flight” camera to measure growth on infants, and a provisional patent on the mechanism of tolerance to stimulant medication (PATSMTA).

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