Strattera Part 3
Posted: Wednesday, December 29, 2004
by Anthony Kane MD
ADD ADHD Child Behavior Treatment and Medication
Back to Page 2
Strattera Part 3
My Opinion
It is clear that Strattera is potentially a very significant advancement in ADHD
treatment. Does mean you should run out and get it?
There are two consideration that no one seems to be discussing which I feel are
very significant.
First, almost all the studies compare Strattera to placebo. That means Lilly has
proven that Strattera works better than doing nothing. How well does Strattera
do when compared to Ritalin or Dexedrine? So far I have found only one study
that addressed this question.
The study examined 228 children over a ten-week period to compare the
effectiveness of Strattera with that of Ritalin. The researchers report that they
did not find a statistically significant difference between the Strattera group and
the Ritalin group. But there is a weakness in this study. They only placed 44
children in the Ritalin test group. What this type of group disparity does is that
it skews the data to make it harder to find differences between the two groups.
So in effect, the experiment was designed to hide results that might be harmful to
Strattera. Was this their intention? Of course, not! What a cynical thing to
think! Still, it would have been better if the experiment had been designed to
find differences between the medications rather than to hide them. So, even
though everyone is claiming Strattera works as well as Ritalin, I am not
convinced.
There is a more significant consideration, which is actually a consideration with
any new drug. Ritalin and Dexedrine have been around for almost a century.
Of all psychiatric medications, nothing else has been studied and tested so
thoroughly. Many people have very strong opinions about these drugs and
their effects. Some people like them, some people hate them, but everyone
agrees to one thing. There are going to be no major surprises. We are not
going to find out that Ritalin has some catastrophic side effect that nobody
could have predicted. It has been around too long. Whatever is going to
happen already has happened.
stringent about its requirements before allowing a new drug on the market.
Most people think they are too conservative and are blocking people from
receiving effective medication. But the FDA is not infallible, and medicines
with dangerous effects do get through the screening process.
Seldane was one of the main drugs that I used in residency. At the time, no one
knew that when combined with erythromycin it caused a fatal reaction in some
people. A few years after that, there was another new drug on the market that
ran into problems. A new class of antibiotics, called Quinolones came onto the
market in the 1980's. One company, developed it's own Quinolone in order to
get a piece of this market. The drug was called Omnifloxin, and it seemed like
the other five or six drugs that were available at that time. We soon found out
there was a difference. Omnifloxin had fatal side effects in some people. It was
taken off the market soon after its introduction.
Will this happen with Strattera? Sure, it was tested in 1000 people for a year.
But say, for example, that Strattera would cause some catastrophic problem after
year in as few as 1 in 5000 patients. It is unlikely the testing that was done
would pick this up. And now we start to give it to millions of our children- well,
I don't have my calculator on me, but it seems we would be in for big problems
with a lot of children.
Do I really think this will happen? Probably not. But with Ritalin or Dexedrine
I am sure it won't happen.
My Recommendation
So what should you do? My opinion is as follows:
-
If you are happy with what your child is taking, there is no reason to
switch to Strattera.
If your child is going on medication for the first time, Strattera should
not be your first choice.
The only time I think you should consider Strattera is if your child has
tried the available stimulant medications at various dosages and they
didn't work.
In another year or so, after we know more about the long-term effects of
Strattera, I will probably change my recommendations. But that is how I see
it now.
What if your child is on Strattera already? Should you worry? First of all,
the physicians of a million children seem to disagree with me, so you can
always rely on their assessment. More importantly, if Strattera is working for
your child, then I feel that you should keep your child on it and hope for the
best. The concerns I have are very remote. If you found something that
definitely helps your child, this outweighs the concern for possible
undetected problems.
Whatever you decide to do, I wish for your success.
Anthony Kane, MD
 ADD ADHD Advances
Anthony Kane, MD is a physician and international lecturer.
Get ADD ADHD Child Behavior and Treatment Help for your ADHD child, including child behavior advice and information on the latest ADHD treatment. Sign up for the  free ADD ADHD Advances online journal
bodhranCeltic HarpSitarhighland bagpipebagpipe sitar celtic harp bodhranpractice chanter
This Article has been viewed 1,263 times. (Not updated in real-time.)
No comments yet.We want your comments! If you can read this, you don't have javascript enabled, so you can't use this comment system. Please enable javascript.