Psychotropic drug treatment patterns in persons with fragile X syndrome

KC Dominick, HF Andrews, WE Kaufmann… - Journal of Child and …, 2021 - liebertpub.com
Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychopharmacology, 2021liebertpub.com
Objective: Psychiatric comorbidity is common in fragile X syndrome (FXS) and often
addressed through pharmacological management. Here we examine data in the Fragile X
Online Registry With Accessible Research Database (FORWARD) to characterize specific
symptoms being treated with psychotropic medication, patterns of medication use, as well as
the influence of gender, intellectual disability (ID), age, and autism spectrum disorder (ASD)
diagnosis. Methods: Data were drawn from the 975 participants who have a completed …
Objective: Psychiatric comorbidity is common in fragile X syndrome (FXS) and often addressed through pharmacological management. Here we examine data in the Fragile X Online Registry With Accessible Research Database (FORWARD) to characterize specific symptoms being treated with psychotropic medication, patterns of medication use, as well as the influence of gender, intellectual disability (ID), age, and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) diagnosis.
Methods: Data were drawn from the 975 participants who have a completed clinician form. We explored the frequency of psychotropic medication use for the following symptom clusters: attention, hyperactivity, anxiety, hypersensitivity, obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), mood swings, irritability/agitation, aggression, and self-injury (IAAS).
Results: A majority of participants (617 or 63.3%) were taking a psychotropic medication, including investigational drugs. Medications were often targeting multiple symptoms. Psychotropic medication use was more common in males, adolescents, and those with comorbid ID and ASD. Anxiety was the most frequently targeted symptom, followed by attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms and IAAS. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) were the most frequently prescribed medication class among all patients (n = 266, 43%), followed by stimulants (n = 235, 38%), each with no gender difference. Antipsychotics were the third most frequently prescribed medication class (n = 205, 33%), and were more frequently prescribed to males and those with ID and ASD.
Conclusions: Anxiety, attention and hyperactivity were the most common symptom targets for psychopharmacologic intervention in FXS. Our results support clinical knowledge that males with comorbid ASD and ID have a more severe presentation requiring more intervention including medications. These results highlight the need for examination of symptom overlap and interaction.
Mary Ann Liebert