Autism Spectrum Disorder Clinical Trial
— PIEOfficial title:
Evaluation of a Novel Intervention for Infants At Risk for Neurodevelopmental Disorders
Verified date | June 2021 |
Source | University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
This study entails a "proof of concept" evaluation of a novel intervention, Parents and Infants Engaged (PIE), for prodromal infants at-risk for neurodevelopmental disorders (NDs). The objectives of the current study are to examine whether the PIE intervention (a) transforms parent-infant transactions over time as intended, thereby facilitating increases in the time infants spend in joint engagement with their parents, and (b) is associated with improved social-communication functioning and positive changes in indices of autonomic self-regulation in infants at-risk for NDs.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 72 |
Est. completion date | May 30, 2021 |
Est. primary completion date | April 1, 2020 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 11 Months to 16 Months |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - For the intervention trial: infant must meet risk criteria on the First Years Inventory (Calculated based on data collected in another study where risk status on the FYI was confirmed with follow up at 3 years. We empirically determined combinations of the two FYI domain scores that would sort respondents into "at-risk" and "not-at-risk." The resulting cut-points enabled us to sort children such that we capture about 1/3 of those who would go on to be confirmed as having a autism spectrum diagnosis while misclassifying less than 5% of the typically developing (TD) sample as at-risk). Infants also must score at least one s.d. below the mean on either the Receptive or Expressive subscale t scores AND meet the following SPA inclusion criteria on hyporeactivity (HYPO) or hyperreactivity (HYPER): - "HYPO": Cut-point (equal or greater than) of 1.69 for Mean of the raw orienting score across 7 items, each with the range of 1 to 4 possible points) - "HYPER": Cut-point (equal or greater than) of .333 for Mean of the raw approach/avoid novel toys score across 9 items, each with the range of 0 to 2 possible points) OR Any clear "defensive" response on orienting items or "Yes" to covering ears to sound (in stereotypies checklist) Exclusion Criteria: - families who speak English < 50% of the time at home - infants with previously identified genetic disorders (e.g., Down syndrome) - infants with identified vision/hearing/physical impairments. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill | Chapel Hill | North Carolina |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill | Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), University of Southern California |
United States,
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* Note: There are 23 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change in Mean Percent of Parent Child Dyadic Engagement Over Time From Baseline to Posttest 1 | This system entails continuous coding of infants' attention engagement into one of 6 mutually exclusive states: unengaged, onlooking, object engaged, person-engaged, supported joint engagement, and coordinated joint engagement. Due to the importance of the construct of engagement to our PIE theory of change, the total percent of time in dyadic engagement (higher level supported + coordinated) will serve as the most proximal intervention outcome (i.e., changes expected at Posttest-1). Recent studies with children with NDs have shown that the coding system is sensitive to change in joint engagement after relatively short interventions. | Baseline, Posttest 1 (6-8 weeks after baseline) | |
Primary | Change in Mean Percent of Parent Child Dyadic Engagement Over Time From Baseline to Posttest 2 | This system entails continuous coding of infants' attention engagement into one of 6 mutually exclusive states: unengaged, onlooking, object engaged, person-engaged, supported joint engagement, and coordinated joint engagement. Due to the importance of the construct of engagement to our PIE theory of change, the total percent of time in dyadic engagement (higher level supported + coordinated) will serve as the most proximal intervention outcome (i.e., changes expected at Posttest-1). Recent studies with children with NDs have shown that the coding system is sensitive to change in joint engagement after relatively short interventions. | Baseline, Posttest 2 (13-16 weeks after baseline) | |
Secondary | Change in Rating of Parent Responsiveness to Child Sensory Reactivity Cues From Baseline to Posttest 1 | Parent-child interaction videos will be coded for parent responsiveness to child sensory reactivity cues. These are each rated on a 0-7 scale. Higher scores indicate greater responsivity from parents. | Baseline, Posttest 1 (6-8 weeks after baseline) | |
Secondary | Change in Rating of Parent Responsiveness to Child Sensory Reactivity Cues From Baseline to Posttest 2 | Parent-child interaction videos will be coded for parent responsiveness to child sensory reactivity cues. These are each rated on a 0-7 scale. Higher scores indicate greater responsivity from parents. | Baseline, posttest 2 (13-16 weeks after baseline) | |
Secondary | Change in Rating of Parent Responsiveness to Child Prelinguistic Communication Cues From Baseline to Posttest 1 | Parent-child interaction videos will be coded for parent responsiveness to child prelinguistic communication cues. These are each rated on a 0-7 scale. Higher scores indicate greater responsivity from parents. | Baseline, Posttest 1 (6-8 weeks after pretest) | |
Secondary | Change in Rating of Parent Responsiveness to Child Prelinguistic Communication Cues From Baseline to Posttest 2 | Parent-child interaction videos will be coded for parent responsiveness to child prelinguistic communication cues. These are each rated on a 0-7 scale. Higher scores indicate greater responsivity from parents. | Baseline, Posttest 2 (13-16 weeks after baseline) | |
Secondary | Change in Rate of Infant Intentional Communication Over Time, Baseline to Posttest 1 | Rate of child intentional communication during parent-child interaction, coded from videos. Video recordings of parent-child interactions were coded for infants' intentional communication acts (i.e., acts directed to the parent): vocalizations, gestures, or both (acts combining vocalizations and gestures). A total acts variable was calculated for the sum of all communication acts in a recording. The total communication acts variable was transformed into a rate variable (instances per minute) for the purpose of this outcome. | Baseline, Posttest 1 (6-8 weeks after pretest) | |
Secondary | Change in Rate of Infant Intentional Communication Over Time, Baseline to Posttest 2 | Rate of infant intentional communication during parent-child interaction, coded from videos. Video recordings of parent-child interactions were coded for infants' intentional communication acts (i.e., acts directed to the parent): vocalizations, gestures, or both (acts combining vocalizations and gestures). A total acts variable was calculated for the sum of all communication acts in a recording. The total communication acts variable was transformed into a rate variable (instances per minute) for the purpose of this outcome. | Baseline, Posttest 2 (13-16 weeks after pretest) | |
Secondary | Change in Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia From Baseline to Posttest 2 During Social Stimuli | Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia (RSA) levels will be collected using a standard protocol while the child is seated in a high chair exposed to social and non-social stimuli. RSA indexes the variability in heartrate that is associated with respiratory inspiration and expiration. RSA levels are expected to increase with development during exposure to both social and nonsocial stimuli in the context of this protocol. Higher RSA levels during exposure to social stimuli involving child-directed speech have been predictive of better language outcomes in previous studies of preschoolers diagnosed with autism. | Baseline, Posttest 2 (13-16 weeks after baseline) | |
Secondary | Change in Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia From Baseline to Posttest 2 During Non-Social Stimuli | Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia (RSA) levels will be collected using a standard protocol while the child is seated in a high chair exposed to social and non-social stimuli. RSA indexes the variability in heartrate that is associated with respiratory inspiration and expiration. RSA levels are expected to increase with development during exposure to both social and nonsocial stimuli in the context of this protocol. Higher RSA levels during exposure to social stimuli involving child-directed speech have been predictive of better language outcomes in previous studies of preschoolers diagnosed with autism. | Baseline, Posttest 2 (13-16 weeks after baseline) | |
Secondary | Change in Skin Conductance Levels From Baseline to Posttest 2 | Skin conductance levels will be collected using a standard protocol while the child is seated in a high chair exposed to social and non-social stimuli. | Baseline, Posttest 2 (13-16 weeks after baseline) | |
Secondary | Change in The Behavioral Observation of Social Communication Change (BOSCC) From Baseline to Posttest 2 | A treatment response measure of social communication behaviors and other behaviors associated with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Administration of the BOSCC involves a 12-minute video recorded interaction between an examiner and a young child using two standard sets of toys and play with bubbles. Behaviors are coded from video. Total score range is 16-80. Higher scores indicate more atypical social communication skills, lower scores indicate better skills. | Baseline, Posttest 2 (13-16 weeks after baseline) | |
Secondary | Change in The Attention Following Protocol (AF Protocol) From Baseline to Posttest 2 | Designed to measure the extent to which children will follow attentional cues of the examiner. Six prompts for attention following are embedded into the larger study protocol. Items are scored dichotomously as yes "1" or no "0".Total score range is 0-6. Higher scores indicate more typical responses to bids for joint attention. | Baseline, Posttest 2 (13-16 weeks after baseline) | |
Secondary | Change in Mullen Scales of Early Learning Receptive Language T-Scores From Baseline to Posttest 2 | The Mullen Scales of Early Learning (MSEL) is a standardized developmental assessment for children birth to 58 months, frequently used in studies of children with NDs, This outcome comprises changes in standardized T-scores (Mean = 50, SD = 10) on the MSEL Receptive Language scale. Higher scores indicate greater developmental skills. | Baseline, Posttest 2 (13-16 weeks after baseline) | |
Secondary | Change in Mullen Scales of Early Learning Expressive Language T-scores From Baseline to Posttest 2 | The MSEL is a standardized developmental assessment for children birth to 58 months, frequently used in studies of children with NDs, This outcome comprises changes in standardized T-scores (Mean = 50, SD = 10) on the MSEL Expressive Language scale. Higher scores indicate greater developmental skills. | Baseline, posttest 2 (13-16 weeks after baseline) | |
Secondary | Change in Sensory Processing Assessment for Young Children From Baseline to Posttest 2 in Hypo-Reactivity | A play-based assessment used to measure children's approach-avoidance to novel sensory toys (i.e., hyper-reactivity) and orienting responses (i.e., hypo-reactivity) across three sensory modalities (auditory, visual, tactile). The investigators will report a mean score for Hypo (range = 1-5) and Hyper (range = 1-5) sensory subscales. Higher scores indicate greater sensory differences in that domain (e.g. a high hypo domain score would indicate more hyposensitive reactions to sensory stimuli seen in the child). | Baseline, posttest 2 (13-16 weeks after baseline) | |
Secondary | Change in Sensory Processing Assessment for Young Children From Baseline to Posttest 2 in Hyper-Reactivity | A play-based assessment used to measure children's approach-avoidance to novel sensory toys (i.e., hyper-reactivity) and orienting responses (i.e., hypo-reactivity) across three sensory modalities (auditory, visual, tactile). The investigators will report a mean score for Hypo (range = 1-5) and Hyper (range = 1-5) sensory subscales. Higher scores indicate greater sensory differences in that domain (e.g. a high hypo domain score would indicate more hyposensitive reactions to sensory stimuli seen in the child). | Baseline, posttest 2 (13-16 weeks after baseline) | |
Secondary | Change in The Sensory Experiences Questionnaire Version 2.1 From Baseline to Posttest 1 in Hypo-reactivity | A 43 item parent questionnaire that asks about the child's responses to various sensory stimuli in the context of functional activities and daily routines in the child's environment. It also documents strategies parents use to respond to their child's behaviors. Hyper and Hypo mean domain scores will be reported (range = 1-5). Greater domain scores indicate a greater presence of that type of sensory response. | Baseline, posttest 1 (6-8 weeks after baseline) | |
Secondary | Change in The Sensory Experiences Questionnaire Version 2.1 From Baseline to Posttest 1 in Hyper-reactivity | A 43 item parent questionnaire that asks about the child's responses to various sensory stimuli in the context of functional activities and daily routines in the child's environment. It also documents strategies parents use to respond to their child's behaviors. Hyper and Hypo mean domain scores will be reported (range = 1-5). Greater domain scores indicate a greater presence of that type of sensory response. | Baseline, posttest 1 (6-8 weeks after baseline) | |
Secondary | Change in The Sensory Experiences Questionnaire Version 2.1 From Baseline to Posttest 2 in Hypo-reactivity | A 43 item parent questionnaire that asks about the child's responses to various sensory stimuli in the context of functional activities and daily routines in the child's environment. It also documents strategies parents use to respond to their child's behaviors. Hyper and Hypo mean domain scores will be reported (range = 1-5). Greater domain scores indicate a greater presence of that type of sensory response. | Baseline, posttest 2 (13-16 weeks after baseline) | |
Secondary | Change in The Sensory Experiences Questionnaire Version 2.1 From Baseline to Posttest 2 in Hyper-reactivity | A 43 item parent questionnaire that asks about the child's responses to various sensory stimuli in the context of functional activities and daily routines in the child's environment. It also documents strategies parents use to respond to their child's behaviors. Hyper and Hypo mean domain scores will be reported (range = 1-5). Greater domain scores indicate a greater presence of that type of sensory response. | Baseline, Posttest 2 (13-16 weeks after baseline) |
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