Phosphatidylserine enriched with polyunsaturated n‐3 fatty acid supplementation for attention‐deficit hyperactivity disorder in children and adolescents with epilepsy: A randomized placebo‐controlled trial

Author:

Rheims Sylvain123ORCID,Herbillon Vania24,Gaillard Ségolène5,Mercier Catherine6,Villeuve Nathalie7,Villéga Frédéric8ORCID,Cances Claude9,Castelnau Pierre10,Napuri Silvia11,de Saint‐Martin Anne12ORCID,Auvin Stéphane131415ORCID,Nguyen The Tich Sylvie16,Berquin Patrick17,de Bellecize Julitta4,Milh Mathieu7ORCID,Roy Pascal6,Arzimanoglou Alexis24ORCID,Bodennec Jacques23,Bezin Laurent23ORCID,Kassai Behrouz518,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Functional Neurology and Epileptology Hospices Civils de Lyon and Lyon 1 University Lyon France

2. Lyon Neuroscience Research Center, INSERM U1028/CNRS UMR 5292 Lyon 1 University Lyon France

3. Epilepsy Institute Lyon France

4. Epilepsy, Sleep and Paediatric Neurophysiology Department Hospices Civils de Lyon Lyon France

5. Clinical Investigation Centre 1407, Hospices Civils de Lyon‐Inserm Hôpital Louis Pradel Bron France

6. Department of Biostatistics Hospices Civils de Lyon Lyon France

7. Department of Pediatric Neurology APHM Marseille France

8. CIC 1401 Department of Pediatric Neurology Bordeaux France

9. Department of Pediatric Neurology Toulouse France

10. Department of Pediatric Neurology Tours France

11. Department of Pediatric Neurology Rennes France

12. Department of Pediatric Neurology Strasbourg France

13. Pediatric Neurology Department, AP‐HP, Robert‐Debré University Hospital CRMR Épilepsies Rares, EpiCARE Member Paris France

14. INSERM NeuroDiderot Université Paris Cité Paris France

15. Institut Universitaire de France (IUF) Paris France

16. Department of Pediatric Neurology Lille France

17. Department of Pediatric Neurology Amiens France

18. Laboratoire de Biométrie et Biologie Evolutive, Equipe Biostatistique‐Santé, CNRS, UMR 5558 Lyon 1 University Villeurbanne France

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAttention‐deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a frequent comorbidity in children with epilepsy, which management mostly relies on the usual treatments of ADHD, especially methylphenidate. Supplementation with polyunsaturated n‐3 Fatty Acid (PUFA) has been proposed as an alternative therapeutic approach in ADHD without epilepsy but has never been evaluated in epilepsy‐associated ADHD.MethodsA multicenter double blind randomized placebo‐controlled trial evaluating supplementation with PUFA, in eicosapentaenoic‐ and docosahexaenoic‐acid form, conjugated to a phospholipid vector (PS‐Omega3) in children aged >6 and <16‐years old, and suffering from any type of epilepsy and ADHD (inattentive or combined type) according to DSM‐V. After a 4‐week baseline period, patients were allocated (1:1) either to placebo group or to PS‐Omega 3 group and entered a 12 week‐double‐blind treatment period which was followed by a 12 week‐open‐label treatment period. The primary outcome was the reduction of the ADHD‐rating scale IV attention‐deficit subscore after 12 weeks of treatment.ResultsThe study was stopped early because of lack of eligible participants and the expected sample size was not reached. Seventy‐four patients were randomized, 44 in PS‐Omega3, and 30 in the placebo group. The reduction after 12 weeks of treatment in the inattention subscore of the ADHD‐IV scale was −1.57 in the PS‐Omega3 group, and −2.90 in the placebo group (p = 0.33, α = 5%). Results were similar after 24 weeks of treatment and for all other ADHD‐related secondary outcomes, with no difference between placebo and PS‐Omega3.ConclusionOur study remaining underpowered, no formal conclusion about the effect of Ps‐Omega3 could be drawn. However, our data strongly suggested that the PS‐Omega 3 formulation used in the current study did not improve ADHD symptoms in children with epilepsy.Plain Language SummarySupplementation with polyunsaturated n‐3 Fatty Acid (PUFA) has been proposed in ADHD but has never been evaluated in patients with both epilepsy and ADHD. To address this issue, we conducted a multicenter double blind randomized placebo‐controlled trial evaluating supplementation with PUFA in children with epilepsy and ADHD. The study was stopped early because of lack of eligible participants, hampering formal conclusion. However, the evolution of the ADHD symptoms at 12 and 24 weeks did not differ between placebo and PUFA supplementation, strongly suggesting that PUFA did not improve ADHD symptoms in children with epilepsy.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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