| Literature DB >> 22937250 |
Jennifer Gerdts1, Raphael Bernier.
Abstract
The presence of autism-related traits has been well documented in undiagnosed family members of individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The most common finding is mild impairments in social and communication skills that are similar to those shown by individuals with autism, but exhibited to a lesser degree. Termed the broader autism phenotype (BAP), these traits suggest a genetic liability for autism-related traits in families. Genetic influence in autism is strong, with identical twins showing high concordance for the diagnosis and related traits and approximately 20% of all ASD cases having an identified genetic mechanism. This paper highlights the studies conducted to date regarding the BAP and considers the implications of these findings for the etiology and treatment of ASD.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22937250 PMCID: PMC3420416 DOI: 10.1155/2011/545901
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autism Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1933
Investigations of social abilities, communication skills, and personality traits in ASD parents and siblings.
| Sample | Control group | Measures of social communication skills | Key findings | |
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| Wolff et al. 1988 [ | (i) Affected children all had useful language | Parents of children with variety of developmental delays, including DS, Prader-Willi Syndrome, and idiopathic delays | Personality interview developed by author [ | (i) 46% of ASD parents, particularly fathers, versus 0% of controls had “schizoid” personality traits, meaning impaired rapport with interviewers, suspiciousness, low-emotional responsiveness, difficulties with communication (either over or under), guardedness, and excessive discussion of special interests |
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| Landa et al. 1992 [ | (i) 43 ASD parents (sex breakdown not reported) | DS parents and adults with no children with ASD | PRS | (i) Using blindly rated scores, 42% of ASD parents had some pragmatic language deficit compared to 2% of controls |
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| Szatmari et al. 1993 [ | (i) Affected children had a variety of cognitive levels, evenly sampled across severity levels ( | DS parents (to control for low IQs) and parents of very low birth weight children (to control for higher IQs) | (i) Relative's Screening Interview (developmental history) | (i) Primarily examined cognitive functioning and results are described in text |
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| Bolton et al. 1994 [ | (i) Affected children were oversampled for females. Sampled evenly for IQs between 30–49, 50–69, and 70+. | DS parents and siblings | FHI | (i) 20.4% of ASD siblings demonstrated either communication atypicalities, social impairments, or restricted behaviors compared to 3.1% of control siblings |
| (i) Affected children had IQs evenly distributed across severity levels. | (i) 24% of ASD parents were rated to be aloof (decreased interest in social interaction) compared to 8% of DS parents | |||
| (ii) ASD parents (45 mothers, 42 fathers) | DS parents | M-PAS | (ii) 22% of ASD parents were rated to be undemonstrative (restricted range of affective expression) compared to 11% of DS parents | |
| Piven et al. 1994 [ | (iii) Control Parents (19 mothers, 19 fathers) | (iii) 10% of ASD parents were rated to be untactful (behavior that was interpreted to be off-putting) compared to 3% of DS parents | ||
| (iv) 16% of ASD parents were rated for at least 2 of these traits compared to 0% DS parents | ||||
| (v) IQ of children was unrelated to M-PAS ratings in parents | ||||
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| Fombonne et al. 1997 [ | (i) Same ASD sample as Bolton et al., 1994 [ | DS relatives | FHI | (i) Primarily examined cognitive functioning in family members and results are described elsewhere |
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| Piven et al. 1997 [ | (i) Multiplex ASD families, 51% of affected children had IQs over 70 | DS parents | (i) M-PAS-R | (i) 25–50% of ASD parents showed aloof, hypersensitive to criticism, anxious, and rigidity (difficulty adjusting to change) traits compared to 3–5% of DS parents |
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| Piven et al. 1997 [ | (i) Same ASD and parent sample as Piven, Palmer, Landa et al., 1997 [ | DS relatives | FHI | (i) Social deficits : 57% of ASD fathers versus 13% of DS fathers; 36% of ASD mothers versus 13% of DS mothers |
| Folstein et al., 1994 [ | (i) Affected children stratified to include ~equal numbers across IQ severity levels (<30, 30–50, 50–70, and 70+) | DS relatives | (i) FHI | (i) Primarily examined cognitive functioning and results are described elsewhere |
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| Murphy et al., 2000 [ | (i) Same ASD sample as Bolton et al., 1994 [ | DS relatives | (i) M-PAS | (i) In ASD parents, the traits anxious and conscientious were prominent compared to DS Parents |
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| Pickles et al., 2000 [ | (i) Combined two study samples to allow for even distribution of IQ of the affected child (including an oversampling of IQs < 50) | DS relatives | FHI | (i) 7.5% of all ASD relatives were classified as BAP by the FHI compared to 2.7% of controls |
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| Briskman et al. 2001 [ | (i) Affected children had IQ > 65 and were only male | (i) Relatives of individuals with Dyslexia | (i) Interview developed by authors | (i) ASD parents (particularly fathers) had significantly higher scores than parents in both the dyslexia and typically developing groups |
| Bishop et al., 2004 [ | (i) Affected children (59 met for autism, 21 met for PDD-NOS) | Parents of children without ASD | AQ | (i) Social and communication skills significantly lower in ASD parents (particularly fathers) compared to control parents |
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| Bishop et al. 2006 [ | (i) Same ASD sample as Bishop et al., 2004 [ | Typically developing children of a variety of IQ levels | CCC-2 | (i) 23.8% of ASD siblings scored 2 SD below the control mean compared to 2.2% of controls |
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| Di Michele et al. 2007 [ | (i) Average FSIQ of affected children was 88.9 | (i) Parents of “healthy” children matched for mental (but not chronological) age of affected child | (i) Gricean conversational maxims tasks | (i) ASD parents detected fewer pragmatic language errors (2 SD below the norm) in recorded conversations (e.g., failing to perceive redundant, irrelevant, or uninformative information) compared to parents in both control groups |
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| Losh & Piven, 2007 [ | (i) Affected children were “high functioning” and were either simplex or multiplex | DS parent or parent of typically developing children | (i) M-PAS-R | (i) Only those parents with aloof personalities had significant difficulty recognizing emotion/mental states |
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| Ruser et al., 2007 [ | (i) Affected children had “sufficient language to complete battery”; average FSIQ was 86.63 | (i) SLI parents (score <13th percentile on standardized language test or <9th percentile on nonword repetition) | PRS-M | (i) ~ 15% of both SLI and ASD parents (particularly fathers) had significant conversation challenges compared to < 5% of DS parents |
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| Whitehouse et al. 2007 [ | (i) Affected children had NVIQ >85 | (i) SLI parents (scores <10th percentile on at least 2 standardized language tests) | AQ | (i) Primarily examined structural language functioning and results are described elsewhere |
| Scheeren & Stauder, 2008 [ | (i) Affected children had FSIQ >70 | Parents of typically developing child without family history of ASD | AQ | (i) No group differences (except control mothers scored higher than ASD mothers on one subtest “attention to detail”) |
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| Losh et al., 2009 [ | (i) Affected children were >16 years and had NVIQ >80 | Parents of typically developing child without family history of ASD | (i) M-PAS-R | (i) 27% of ASD parents had social features of BAP (more often in fathers) while 41% had rigidity traits on the M-PAS-R (equal % mothers and fathers) |
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| Schwichten-berg, et al., 2010 [ | (i) Affected children diagnosed with autism, Asperger's, or PDD-NOS via ADOS and clinical evaluation (either simplex or multiplex) | (i) Parents, infant, and additional siblings of typically developing child | SRS | (i) At 36 months, infant siblings were categorized as typical, ASD, or “other developmental concerns” |
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| Wheelwright et al., 2010 [ | (i) Affected children (parent-report of diagnosis on the autism spectrum) | Parents of typically developing children | AQ | (i) ASD parents had greater AQ scores in 4 of 5 domains than control parents, with males overall showing greater impairment than females in both groups |
Abbreviations: ADOS : Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule; AQ : Autism Spectrum Quotient; ASD parents : undiagnosed parents of individuals diagnosed with ASD; ASD siblings : undiagnosed siblings of individuals diagnosed with ASD; CCC-2 : Children's Communication Checklist-2; DS : Down syndrome; FHI : Family History Interview; M-PAS : Modified Personality Assessment Schedule, M-PAS-R : Modified Personality Assessment Schedule, Revised; PAS : Personality Assessment Schedule; PRS : Pragmatic Rating Scale; S : D Standard Deviation; SLI : Specific Language Impairment; VABS : Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales.
Measures developed and utilized to assess the BAP.
| Measure name | Reference | Intended population | Measure notes | |
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| Autism-Spectrum Quotient (AQ) | Baron-Cohen et al. 2001 [ | Typical adults and ASD parents | (i) A brief, self-report questionnaire assessing 5 domains: social skills, communication, attention to detail, attention switching, and imagination | |
| Questionnaires | Broader Autism Phenotype Questionnaire (BAPQ) | Hurley et al. 2007 [ | ASD parents | (i) A self- and informant-report questionnaire of social personality, rigidity, and pragmatic language deficits (intended to parallel the 3 domains of impairment in ASD) |
| Children's Communication Checklist, 2nd Edition | Bishop, 2003 [ | Children aged 4–16 years of age | (i) A parent-report questionnaire assessing various communication skills with age-based scaled scores and a general communication composite | |
| Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS) | Constantino et al. 2000 [ | Children and adults both with and without ASD | (i) An informant-report (generally parent, teacher, or spouse) questionnaire measuring autism-related traits along one continuum of social reciprocity, which purportedly reflects a single underlying vulnerability to ASD-related traits [ | |
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| (i) Assesses autism-related traits in 4 domains (social motivation, social expressivity, conversational skills, and flexibility/range of interests) via both direct clinical observation and interview | ||||
| Broader Phenotype Autism Symptom Scale (BPASS) |
Dawson et al., 2007 [ | Children and adults both with and without ASD | (ii) Adults are interviewed about themselves; parents are interviewed about their children | |
| (iii) Ratings for items within domains range from impaired to nonimpaired, with some questions identifying those with a level above the norm (designed to increase statistical power to detect evidence for genetic effects in QTL analyses) | ||||
| (iv) Two domains (social motivation and flexibility) have the positive QTL findings [ | ||||
| (i) First measure developed to directly measure autism-related traits in family members via a semistructured interview and provides categorical (not continuous) information | ||||
| Interviews and Direct Behavioral Observation | Family History Interview (FHI) or Family History Schedule (FHS) | Bolton, et al., 1994 [ | Children and adults both with and without ASD | (ii) Informant rates of social and communication skills and range of interests of immediate and extended family members |
| (iii) An algorithm determines whether there is a presence or absence of BAP traits in 3 domains: social, communication (primarily assessing a history of language/reading delays), and repetitive behaviors | ||||
| (i) A semi-structured interview measuring ASD-related personality traits | ||||
| (ii) Participants are interviewed about themselves while an informant (generally a spouse) is asked similar questions in a separate interview | ||||
| Modified Personality Assessment Schedule-Revised (M-PAS-R) | Piven et al., 1997 [ | Adults | (iii) Participants are rated by trained examiners based on behavioral examples given by either the subject or the informant | |
| (iv) Originally including 18 domains, it was later revised to focus on 8 traits particularly applicable to ASD: conscientious, rigidity, aloof, undemonstrative, anxious, hypersensitive to criticism, unresponsive, and untactful | ||||
| (v) Rigidity and aloof traits have been the most valid and reliable discriminators [ | ||||
| (i) Intended to assess verbal and nonverbal pragmatic language via 15 minutes of conversational exchange and perhaps time spent in direct assessment of parents | ||||
| Pragmatic Rating Scale (PRS) | Landa et al., 1992 [ | Adults | (ii) Assesses skills in maintaining a flow of conversation. | |
| (iii) Subscales: disinhibited social communication (e.g., abrupt topic change and overly detailed descriptions), awkward/inadequate expression (e.g., vague and inadequate clarification), and odd verbal interaction (e.g., odd humor and inappropriate topics) | ||||
| (iv) Successfully differentiated ASD parents from controls in many studies (e.g., [ | ||||