Clinical trials in autism spectrum disorder: evidence, challenges and future directions.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to review clinical trial evidence on pharmaceuticals, including melatonin, for treating co-occurring symptoms in autism spectrum disorder (ASD).
Results Summary
The study found melatonin effective for treating sleep-related symptoms in children and youth with ASD, though no evidence supports its use for core ASD symptoms.
Population
Children and youth with autism spectrum disorder (ASD).
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
methylphenidate | no change | attention deficit hyperactivity disorder | autism spectrum disorder | - | adequately support the pharmacological treatment | #1 |
atomoxetine | no change | attention deficit hyperactivity disorder | autism spectrum disorder | - | adequately support the pharmacological treatment | #2 |
alpha agonists | no change | attention deficit hyperactivity disorder | autism spectrum disorder | - | adequately support the pharmacological treatment | #3 |
risperidone | no change | irritability/aggression | autism spectrum disorder | - | adequately support the pharmacological treatment | #4 |
aripiprazole | no change | irritability/aggression | autism spectrum disorder | - | adequately support the pharmacological treatment | #5 |
melatonin | no change | sleep | autism spectrum disorder | - | adequately support the pharmacological treatment | #6 |
metformin | decrease | weight gain associated with atypical antipsychotic use | autism spectrum disorder | - | adequately support the pharmacological treatment | #7 |
pharmaceuticals | no change | core symptom domains | autism spectrum disorder | - | no evidence yet to support the routine use | #8 |
pharmacological interventions | no change | core symptoms | children and youth with ASD | - | still lacking | #9 |
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The purpose of this manuscript is to review the evidence generated by clinical trials of pharmaceuticals in autism spectrum disorder (ASD), describe challenges in the conduct of such trials, and discuss future directions RECENT FINDINGS: Clinical trials in ASD have produced several compounds to adequately support the pharmacological treatment of associated symptom domains: attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (methylphenidate, atomoxetine, and alpha agonists), irritability/aggression (risperidone and aripiprazole), sleep (melatonin), and weight gain associated with atypical antipsychotic use (metformin). However, there is no evidence yet to support the routine use of pharmaceuticals for the treatment of core symptom domains. Challenges in the field include biological heterogeneity within ASD, lack of biomarkers that clarify biological heterogeneity or predict response to treatment, lack of data across the lifespan, and suboptimal outcome measures. SUMMARY: Several compounds have evidence for the treatment of co-occurring symptoms in children and youth with ASD, although pharmacological interventions for core symptoms are still lacking. Identifying the various biologies underling ASD and developing biomarkers that stratify biologically homogeneous populations are both necessary to realize the promise of precision medicine in ASD.