October 22, 2025Stephen Faraone, Ph.D., author, researcher, and architect of The ADHD Evidence Project, whose mission is to evaluate and translate the latest scientific findings about ADHD, is setting the tone for how ADHD is understood and treated worldwide.
Here, Faraone shares the insights, discoveries, and challenges most likely to impact ADHD care in the coming years.For decades, we thought that genes played a central role in causing ADHD because ADHD runs in families.
But new studies of DNA, the biological building blocks of genes, are revealing the polygenic origins of the disorder. Key facts emerging from this research include: At the turn of the century, longitudinal studies suggested that ADHD symptoms diminished with time.
By early adulthood, it was thought, only two-thirds of ADHD youth would continue to experience consequential symptoms. New data from the Multimodal Treatment of ADHD study, however, show that remission is often followed by subsequent worsening of ADHD symptoms.
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