Predictors of persistence and remission of ADHD into adolescence: results from a four-year prospective follow-up study
- PMID: 8714323
- DOI: 10.1097/00004583-199603000-00016
Predictors of persistence and remission of ADHD into adolescence: results from a four-year prospective follow-up study
Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the predictors of persistence and the timing of remission of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).
Method: Subjects were 6- to 17-year old Caucasian, non-Hispanic boys with and without ADHD. DSM-III-R structured diagnostic interviews and blind raters were used to examine psychiatric diagnoses, cognitive achievement, social, school, and family functioning at a 4-year follow-up assessment.
Results: At the 4-year follow-up assessment, 85% of children with ADHD continued to have the disorder and 15% remitted. Of those who remitted, half did so in childhood and the other half in adolescence. Predictors of persistence were familiality of ADHD, psychosocial adversity, and comorbidity with conduct, mood, and anxiety disorders.
Conclusions: The findings prospectively confirm that the majority of children with ADHD will continue to express the disorder 4 years later. For a minority of children, ADHD was a transient disorder that remits early in development. In addition, we have shown that persistence of ADHD is predictable. Familiality, adversity, and psychiatric comorbidity may be clinically useful predictors of which children with ADHD are at risk for a persistent disorder.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
