Authors
Miguel Garcia-Argibay, Tore Hofstad, Ingvar Bjelland, Samuele Cortese, Arnstein Mykletun
Published in
BMJ mental health. Volume 29. Issue 1. Jun 22, 2026. Epub Jun 22, 2026.
Abstract
Poor persistence and adherence to attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) medication is a significant barrier to effective long-term care, particularly during adolescence, yet age-specific and sex-specific trajectories remain poorly characterised.
To characterise medication initiation, discontinuation and long-term adherence patterns for children and adolescents diagnosed with ADHD in a real-world setting.
A nationwide retrospective cohort study, including 8961 children and adolescents (aged <18 years) with a new ADHD diagnosis in child and adolescent mental health services between 1 January 2010 and 31 December 2012, with follow-up until 31 December 2021. Main outcomes were medication initiation rates; time to first medication discontinuation, analysed using Kaplan-Meier estimates and restricted mean survival time at 1 year and longitudinal adherence, measured by the proportion of days covered over 9 years.
Of the 8961 individuals in the cohort (mean age at diagnosis, 12 years; 69% male), 6661 (74.3%) initiated medication, with a median time from diagnosis to initiation of 106 days (IQR 17-231); 55% initiated within 90 days. Discontinuation increased significantly with age; adolescents aged 15-17 years remained on treatment for 31.9 fewer days (95% CI -40.8 to -23.1; p<0.001) in the first year compared with children aged 5-11 years. Females also discontinued significantly earlier than males (difference -13.2 days; 95% CI -19.8 to -6.5; p<0.001). Longitudinal analysis confirmed that older age at initiation and female sex were associated with a significantly steeper decline in medication coverage over time.
Discontinuation and low adherence to ADHD medication were common and increased substantially through adolescence, with females at higher risk of early cessation.
Late adolescence warrants closer clinical monitoring and shared decision-making to support appropriate treatment continuation or well-informed discontinuation, particularly for older adolescents and females. Integrating structured transition planning and attention to sex-specific barriers may help reduce avoidable non-adherence during this high-risk period.
PMID:
42331561
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 23 Jun 2026.
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