Literature DB >> 29875706

Patterns and Predictors of Tic Suppressibility in Youth With Tic Disorders.

Christine A Conelea1, Brianna Wellen2, Douglas W Woods3, Deanna J Greene4, Kevin J Black5, Matthew Specht6, Michael B Himle2, Han-Joo Lee7, Matthew Capriotti8,9.   

Abstract

Tic suppression is the primary target of tic disorder treatment, but factors that influence voluntary tic inhibition are not well understood. Several studies using the Tic Suppression Task have demonstrated significant inter-individual variability in tic suppressibility but have individually been underpowered to address correlates of tic suppression. The present study explored patterns and clinical correlates of reward-enhanced tic suppression in youth with tic disorders using a large, pooled dataset. Individual-level data from nine studies using the Tic Suppression Task were pooled, yielding a sample of 99 youth with tic disorders. Analyses examined patterns of tic suppressibility and the relationship between tic suppressibility and demographic and clinical characteristics. A large majority of youth demonstrated a high degree of tic suppression, but heterogeneous patterns of tic suppressibility were also observed. Better tic suppressibility was related to older age and more frequent tics but unrelated to other clinical variables, including presence of psychiatric comorbidity, psychotropic medication status, tic and premonitory urge severity, and self-rated tic suppressibility. The mechanisms underlying the observed heterogeneity in reward-enhanced tic suppressibility warrant further investigation. The Tic Suppression Task is a promising method for testing mechanistic hypotheses related to tic suppression.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Tourette; adolescent; child; suppression; tic

Year:  2018        PMID: 29875706      PMCID: PMC5974106          DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00188

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Front Psychiatry        ISSN: 1664-0640            Impact factor:   4.157


Introduction

Tic disorders (TDs) are childhood-onset conditions characterized by motor and/or vocal tics (1). Unlike symptoms of many other movement disorders, tics associated with TDs are experienced as “unvoluntary” (2) in that they can be inhibited via prefrontally-mediated cognitive control mechanisms (3). The vast majority of patients describe tics as occurring in response to premonitory urges, aversive somatosensory experiences that are temporarily alleviated by tic execution (4, 5). Tic suppression is the primary target of behavioral, pharmacological, and neurostimulation treatments (6, 7). Successful voluntary tic suppression underlies the effectiveness of empirically-supported behavioral interventions for TDs, such as Comprehensive Behavioral Intervention for Tics [CBIT; (6)], which teach specific skills for inhibiting tics in the presence of premonitory urges. Given the central importance of voluntary tic inhibition to nonpharmacological tic management, researchers have studied various questions related to tic suppression using the Tic Suppression Task (TST) developed by Woods and Himle [(8); also see (5, 9–15)]. In this paradigm, a participant is seated in front of a computer or token dispenser and told it is a “tic detector.” In reality, an experimenter unobtrusively observes the child (e.g., using a one-way mirror), and tic frequency is measured via direct observation coding. This deception is employed to reduce reactivity effects, as observation can have significant and non-uniform effects on tic expression (16). Standard TST conditions include baseline (BL; instruction to let tics occur freely) and reinforced suppression (SUP; instruction to suppress tics plus reward delivered by “tic detector” after every 10 s tic-free interval). Additional conditions have been added to this basic paradigm to test experiment-specific hypotheses. Typically, participants are exposed to brief segments of each condition (e.g., 5–10 min) in alternating or random order, with multiple iterations of each condition. The key dependent variable is tic frequency, calculated as a mean rate of tics per minute for each condition. This design allows for within-subject analyses of tic rate by condition and group-level analyses to describe aggregate patterns across conditions. The first study using the TST (n = 4; 8) demonstrated a substantial decrease in tic frequency from BL to SUP (76.3% reduction), which far exceeded the ~10% decrease from BL to “verbal instruction” condition (instructions to suppress without supporting reward contingency). Subsequent research has repeatedly and reliably replicated this effect of reward-enhanced suppression on tic frequency [e.g., (17–19)]. Despite robust findings of reward-enhanced suppression at the group level, significant inter-individual variability in degree of tic suppressibility has been noted. Reasons for this heterogeneity are unknown. Individual studies using the TST have been underpowered to assess correlates of suppression because of reliance on small samples (Ns = 4–15), reflecting feasibility limitations inherent in studying a low-prevalence disorder. Researchers have theorized, or indirectly demonstrated, that tic suppressibility heterogeneity may be related to demographic and clinical factors, such as age, premonitory urge severity, and co-occurring psychopathology (19, 20). Age and premonitory urge severity have been theorized to impact tic suppression, but supporting evidence is limited. Some have suggested that adults and older children/adolescents may be better able to suppress tics due to increased capacity to sustain attention to effortful tasks (3, 8). Consistent with this, Banaschewski et al. (21) found that older youth were more likely to self-report an ability to suppress tics (age 15–19 years > 11–14 years > 8–10 years). However, the age-tic suppression relationship has yet to be tested using objective tic frequency data. Premonitory urges may facilitate tic suppression by serving as a cue to engage in suppression (4). Experimental research on the urge-tic temporal relationship has confirmed that urge intensity increases prior to tics and that tics are more likely to occur when urges are higher (22, 23). Whether urges are a prerequisite for successful suppression is unclear, with two studies in adults demonstrating no association between video-rated tic suppression capacity and premonitory urge severity (24, 25). Somewhat more evidence from studies using the TST suggests a possible relationship between tic suppression and attention problems (e.g., those related to attention deficit hyperactivity disorder; ADHD), although findings are mixed and derived from small samples. Significant associations have been found between decreased tic suppressibility and increased attention problems on a parent-rated scale (26) and continuous performance task (19). Interestingly, Greene et al. (13) reported significant correlations between tic suppression and parent-rated attention problems but in the opposite direction, such that those with more inattention symptoms demonstrated greater tic suppression. Although individual studies using the TST have advanced our understanding of the factors that influence tic suppression, clinically relevant questions about patterns and predictors of suppression have been difficult to address within single, small studies. The present study explored patterns and clinical correlates of tic suppressibility in youth with TDs using a large, pooled data set comprised of data from multiple laboratory studies using the TST. First, we sought to describe the group-level effect of suppression contingent reward on tic frequency and the distribution of tic suppressibility across individuals. Second, we aimed to evaluate candidate demographic and clinical correlates of tic suppressibility. Based on prior research, we hypothesized that better tic suppression would be positively associated with older age and premonitory urge intensity, while poorer tic suppression would be associated with an ADHD diagnosis.

Methods

Study detection

A literature search in databases PubMed and PsycINFO identified research studies utilizing the TST (8) that included conditions of BL and SUP. Fourteen studies were identified and authors were contacted to request individual level, de-identified data for published studies or other protocols their lab had disseminated via peer-reviewed abstracts/conference presentations. All authors responded to our inquiry. Data were available for 9 studies (5, 9, 10, 12, 13, 15, 19, 27, 28). Individual-level datasets were no longer available for older studies (8, 14, 18, 20, 26). A summary of included studies is presented in Table 1. The current study was determined by the Lifespan-Rhode Island Hospital Institutional Review Board (IRB) to not qualify as human subjects research due to the use of de-identified data only. Source studies were all approved by local IRBs.
Table 1

Key design features of the studies included in pooled dataset.

StudyNInclusion criteriaExclusion criteriaDiagnostic interviewBL descriptionSUP descriptionAdditional conditions
Woods et al. (19)13

Age 10–17 years

Diagnosis of TS

Intellectual functioning in low-average range or above

History of suppression-based behavior therapy for tics

Medication changes in past 4 weeks

ADIS-IV

10 min

At start of session

Three SUP durations (5, 25, and 40 min)

Token for every 10 s tic-free interval

5 min rebound evaluation phase after every SUP

Conelea and Woods (10)9

Age 10–17 years

Diagnosis of TS or CTD

Intellectual functioning in low-average range or above

YGTSS severity score ≥14 for TS or ≥10 for CTD

1 visible tic per min

Comorbid ADHD, or CD, ODD with severity rating >6 on ADIS-IV

History of ≥3 sessions of suppression-based behavior therapy for tics

ADIS-IV

6 min

Repeated 3 times in random order

6 min

Repeated 3 times in random order

Token for every 10 s tic-free interval

SUP paired with attention-demanding task

Conelea et al. (12)10

Age 9–17 years

Diagnosis of TS or CTD

Intellectual functioning in low-average range or above

YGTSS severity score ≥14 for TS or ≥10 for CTD

1 visible tic per min

Comorbid ADHD, or CD, ODD with severity rating >6 on ADIS-IV

History of ≥3 sessions of suppression-based behavior therapy for tics

ADIS-IV

10 min initial BL

5 min thereafter

Repeated 2 times in random order

5 min

Repeated 2 times in random order

Token for every 10 s tic-free interval

Stress induction SUP paired with stress induction

Capriotti et al. (27)4

Diagnosis of TS or CTD

Intellectual functioning in low-average range or above

YGTSS severity score ≥14

1 visible tic per min

History of behavior therapy for tics

Comorbid ADHD, or CD, ODD with severity rating ≥5 (≥6 for ADHD) on ADIS-IV

ADIS-IV

5 min

BL was first condition

Repeated 4 more times in fixed order

5 min

Repeated 4 times in fixed order

Point for every 5 s tic-free interval

Response cost involving loss of points for each tic

Specht et al. (15)12

Age 10–17 years

Diagnosis of TS or CTD

Intellectual functioning in low-average range or above

YGTSS severity score ≥14 for TS or ≥10 for CTD

PUTS score ≥12

1 visible tic per min

History of ≥3 weeks of suppression-based behavior therapy for tics

Comorbid CD or ODD with severity rating ≥4 on ADIS-IV

Antipsychotic, anti-hypertensive, benzodiazepine, or selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor medications

ADIS-IV

10 min

BL was first condition

Repeated 2 more times in fixed order

Urge rating every 10 s

40 min

Repeated twice in fixed order

Token for every 15 s tic-free interval

Urge rating every 10 s

n/a
Capriotti et al. (5)15

Age 8–17 years

Diagnosis of TS or CTD

Intellectual functioning in low-average range or above

YGTSS severity score ≥13 and < 30 for TS or ≥9 and < 20 for CTD

1 visible tic per min

History of ≥3 sessions of suppression-based behavior therapy for tics

Current or past psychotic, substance use, or bipolar disorder

Significant suicidal ideation and/or attempts in past 3 months

Medication changes in past 4 weeks

MINI-Kid

10 min initial BL

Subsequent BL were 5 min

Repeated 4 times in fixed order

Urge ratings every 30 s

5 min

Repeated 4 times in fixed order

Point for every 10 s tic-free interval

Urge ratings every 30 s

SUP wit option for 10 s “free to tic” time-out periods

Capriotti et al. (9)5

Age 9–17 years

Diagnosis of TS or CTD

Intellectual functioning in low-average range or above

YGTSS severity score ≥14 and < 35 for TS or ≥10 and < 20 for CTD

1 visible tic per min

History of behavior therapy for tics

Significant suicidal ideation

Neuroleptic medication

Psychotic, substance use, or autism spectrum disorder

Medication changes in past 6 weeks

If on stimulant, adherence for past 3 days and no dose within 10 h of task

MINI-Kid

6 min

BL was first condition

Repeated 2 more times in random order

6 min

Repeated 4 times in random order

Point for every 10 s tic-free interval

SUP with increasing point value for each consecutive 10 s tic-free interval

Greene et al. (13)21

Diagnosis of TTD

English proficiency

Neurological disorder other than tics or migrane, known structural brain disease, mental retardation, autism, psychosis, mania, current major depression, severe systemic illness

K-SADS

5 min

BL was first condition

Repeated once more in random order

5 min

First time in fixed order

Repeated once more in random order

Token for every 10 s tic-free interval

Verbal instructions to suppress

Non-contingent reinforcement

Conelea et al. (28)12

Age 10–17 years

Diagnosis of TS or CTD

YGTSS severity score ≥14 for TS or ≥10 for CTD

1 visible tic per min

English fluency

History of ≥3 sessions of suppression-based behavior therapy for tics

Psychosis, pervasive developmental, or autism spectrum disorder

Mental retardation or cognitive disability

Current suicidal intent

Medication changes during study period

MINI-Kid

5 min

Repeated 3 times in random order

5 min

Repeated 3 times in random order

Point for every 10 s tic-free interval

Response cost involving loss of points for each tic

ADHD, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder; ADIS-IV, Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule-Fourth Edition; BL, baseline; CTD, chronic tic disorder; CD, conduct disorder; K-SADS, Kiddie-Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia; MINI-Kid, Mini Neuropsychiatric Interview for Children and Adolescents; ODD, oppositional defiant disorder; PUTS, Premonitory Urge for Tics Scale; SUP, suppression plus contingent reward; TD, tic disorder; TTD, transient tic disorder; TS, Tourette Syndrome; YGTSS, Yale Global Tic Severity Scale.

Key design features of the studies included in pooled dataset. Age 10–17 years Diagnosis of TS Intellectual functioning in low-average range or above History of suppression-based behavior therapy for tics Medication changes in past 4 weeks 10 min At start of session Three SUP durations (5, 25, and 40 min) Token for every 10 s tic-free interval 5 min rebound evaluation phase after every SUP Age 10–17 years Diagnosis of TS or CTD Intellectual functioning in low-average range or above YGTSS severity score ≥14 for TS or ≥10 for CTD 1 visible tic per min Comorbid ADHD, or CD, ODD with severity rating >6 on ADIS-IV History of ≥3 sessions of suppression-based behavior therapy for tics 6 min Repeated 3 times in random order 6 min Repeated 3 times in random order Token for every 10 s tic-free interval SUP paired with attention-demanding task Age 9–17 years Diagnosis of TS or CTD Intellectual functioning in low-average range or above YGTSS severity score ≥14 for TS or ≥10 for CTD 1 visible tic per min Comorbid ADHD, or CD, ODD with severity rating >6 on ADIS-IV History of ≥3 sessions of suppression-based behavior therapy for tics 10 min initial BL 5 min thereafter Repeated 2 times in random order 5 min Repeated 2 times in random order Token for every 10 s tic-free interval Stress induction SUP paired with stress induction Diagnosis of TS or CTD Intellectual functioning in low-average range or above YGTSS severity score ≥14 1 visible tic per min History of behavior therapy for tics Comorbid ADHD, or CD, ODD with severity rating ≥5 (≥6 for ADHD) on ADIS-IV 5 min BL was first condition Repeated 4 more times in fixed order 5 min Repeated 4 times in fixed order Point for every 5 s tic-free interval Response cost involving loss of points for each tic Age 10–17 years Diagnosis of TS or CTD Intellectual functioning in low-average range or above YGTSS severity score ≥14 for TS or ≥10 for CTD PUTS score ≥12 1 visible tic per min History of ≥3 weeks of suppression-based behavior therapy for tics Comorbid CD or ODD with severity rating ≥4 on ADIS-IV Antipsychotic, anti-hypertensive, benzodiazepine, or selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor medications 10 min BL was first condition Repeated 2 more times in fixed order Urge rating every 10 s 40 min Repeated twice in fixed order Token for every 15 s tic-free interval Urge rating every 10 s Age 8–17 years Diagnosis of TS or CTD Intellectual functioning in low-average range or above YGTSS severity score ≥13 and < 30 for TS or ≥9 and < 20 for CTD 1 visible tic per min History of ≥3 sessions of suppression-based behavior therapy for tics Current or past psychotic, substance use, or bipolar disorder Significant suicidal ideation and/or attempts in past 3 months Medication changes in past 4 weeks 10 min initial BL Subsequent BL were 5 min Repeated 4 times in fixed order Urge ratings every 30 s 5 min Repeated 4 times in fixed order Point for every 10 s tic-free interval Urge ratings every 30 s SUP wit option for 10 s “free to tic” time-out periods Age 9–17 years Diagnosis of TS or CTD Intellectual functioning in low-average range or above YGTSS severity score ≥14 and < 35 for TS or ≥10 and < 20 for CTD 1 visible tic per min History of behavior therapy for tics Significant suicidal ideation Neuroleptic medication Psychotic, substance use, or autism spectrum disorder Medication changes in past 6 weeks If on stimulant, adherence for past 3 days and no dose within 10 h of task 6 min BL was first condition Repeated 2 more times in random order 6 min Repeated 4 times in random order Point for every 10 s tic-free interval SUP with increasing point value for each consecutive 10 s tic-free interval Diagnosis of TTD English proficiency Neurological disorder other than tics or migrane, known structural brain disease, mental retardation, autism, psychosis, mania, current major depression, severe systemic illness 5 min BL was first condition Repeated once more in random order 5 min First time in fixed order Repeated once more in random order Token for every 10 s tic-free interval Verbal instructions to suppress Non-contingent reinforcement Age 10–17 years Diagnosis of TS or CTD YGTSS severity score ≥14 for TS or ≥10 for CTD 1 visible tic per min English fluency History of ≥3 sessions of suppression-based behavior therapy for tics Psychosis, pervasive developmental, or autism spectrum disorder Mental retardation or cognitive disability Current suicidal intent Medication changes during study period 5 min Repeated 3 times in random order 5 min Repeated 3 times in random order Point for every 10 s tic-free interval Response cost involving loss of points for each tic ADHD, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder; ADIS-IV, Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule-Fourth Edition; BL, baseline; CTD, chronic tic disorder; CD, conduct disorder; K-SADS, Kiddie-Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia; MINI-Kid, Mini Neuropsychiatric Interview for Children and Adolescents; ODD, oppositional defiant disorder; PUTS, Premonitory Urge for Tics Scale; SUP, suppression plus contingent reward; TD, tic disorder; TTD, transient tic disorder; TS, Tourette Syndrome; YGTSS, Yale Global Tic Severity Scale.

Participants

To be included in current analyses, individual participants must have met DSM-IV-TR or DSM-5 criteria for a tic disorder (Tourette Disorder, Chronic/Persistent Tic Disorder, or Transient/Provisional Tic Disorder) and had available a Yale Global Tic Severity Scale [YGTSS; (29)] total severity score and tic frequency scores (tics per minute) for conditions of BL and SUP. A total of 99 youth met inclusion criteria. Note that these are all different individuals, as participation in a TST study involving the deception element precludes participation in future TST-based research (all included studies involved deception).

Measures

Measures were selected based upon common availability across studies. Demographic variables included age, gender, and medication status. Medication status was available for n = 97. Due to study variability in medication tracking methods, medication status was coded as presence vs. absence of (1) any psychotropic medication, (2) antipsychotic, (3) stimulant, (4) α2 adrenergic agonist, or (5) serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SRI). Psychiatric diagnostic status was determined using well-validated, structured clinical interviews (see Table 1). Psychiatric comorbidity data were available for 87 youth [excluding (19)] and grouped into the following major diagnostic categories: (1) anxiety disorders (generalized anxiety, separation anxiety, social anxiety, specific phobia, panic, and post-traumatic stress disorders), (2) obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and (3) ADHD (any subtype). Mood disorders (major depressive and bipolar disorders, dysthymia) were not analyzed as only n = 1 had a mood diagnosis. Note that some studies had exclusion criteria related to specific psychiatric diagnoses (see Table 1). Tic severity was measured using the YGTSS, a clinician-rated assessment of tic severity over the past week that produces an overall tic severity score ranging from 0 to 50, such that higher scores indicate greater severity (29). Premonitory urge intensity was measured using the Premonitory Urge for Tics Scale [PUTS; (30)], a self-report measure. Items 1–9 are summed to yield a total score ranging from 9 to 26, such that higher scores indicate more intense urge experiences. PUTS total scores were available for 88 youth. PUTS Item 10 does not contribute to the total score but was included in some studies [n = 63; (10, 12, 15, 19, 28)]. Item 10 measures perceived tic suppressibility (“I am able to stop my tics, even if only for a short period of time”) and was examined in a separate analysis from the PUTS total scores. Tic frequency scores represent the mean number of tics per minute for all within-subject replications of a given condition (BL or SUP), such that each participant had one mean tic frequency score for each condition. To assess the degree to which youth were able to suppress tics during SUP, we calculated a percent change variable that we refer to here as “tic suppressibility” [(BL tic frequency-SUP tic frequency)/BL tic frequency*100]. Positive values indicate tic reduction during SUP (i.e., better suppression), near-zero values indicate little to no difference between conditions (i.e., poor suppression), and negative values indicate tic increase during SUP (i.e., tic worsening during suppression conditions). Of note, this score is similar to but distinct from a change score formula used previously to index tic suppression [i.e., tic “inhibition potency”; (24, 25, 31)], as the dependent variable in those studies was the total score on the Modified Rush Video Rating Scale (32).

Data analysis plan

All measures were examined descriptively. The relationship between tic suppressibility and demographic/clinical characteristics was assessed using independent samples t-tests for dichotomous variables (gender, diagnostic status, medication status). Nonparametric tests were used when data did not meet t-test assumptions. A two-tailed Wilcoxon signed-rank test was used to compare tic frequencies in BL and SUP. The Mann-Whitney test was used to examine tic suppressibility within specific medication classes given unequal sample size distribution. Pearson's correlations were used to examine the relationship between tic suppressibility and continuous variables (age, total YGTSS and PUTS scores, baseline tic frequency).

Results

Participant characteristics

Participants had a mean age of 11.2 years (SD = 3.0, range = 5.0–17.7). Gender distribution reflected the known preponderance of tics in males (male: n = 78, female: n = 21). Forty-two youth (42.4%) had a co-occurring psychiatric diagnosis. Thirty-three had ADHD, 28 had an anxiety disorder, 15 had OCD, and 1 had a mood disorder; 21 had more than one comorbid diagnosis. About one-third were taking a psychotropic medication (n = 29, 29.3%); 17 were taking more than one medication. In terms of specific medication classes, 12 (12.1%) were taking an α2 adrenergic agonist, 10 (10.1%) an SRI, 9 (9.1%) a stimulant, and 8 (8.1%) an antipsychotic. Tic severity on the YGTSS fell in the moderate range (m = 22.3, SD = 7.7, range = 7–39). The mean PUTS total score reflected moderate urge intensity (m = 18.1, SD = 6.2, range = 9–31).

Tic suppressibility

BL mean tic frequency was 7.6 tics per min (SD = 5.9, median = 6.2) and SUP was 2.6 tics per min (SD = 2.9, median = 0.8). Data were not normally distributed (BL: zskewness = 1.5, zkurtosis = 2.96; SUP: zskewness = 2.1, zkurtosis = 4.5; all p < 0.001). Tic frequency was significantly lower during SUP than BL, T = 20.7, z = −7.9, p < 0.001, and the observed effect size was large, r = −0.56. Median tic suppressibility was 71.1% (SD = 38.3), and 89.8% of participants (n = 89) had scores above zero, indicating lower tic rate during SUP than BL. Wide variability was observed (−61.5% through 98.8%; see Figure 1). About 70% (n = 71) of participants had at least a 50% decrease in tic frequency. Notably, 20.2% (n = 20) showed near complete suppression during SUP (90% or greater reduction), 10.1% (n = 10) showed no suppression (tic suppressibility between −25 and 25%), and 7.1% (n = 7) showed tic worsening when trying to suppress (26% or greater increase).
Figure 1

Tic suppressibility across participants.

Tic suppressibility across participants.

Relationship of tic suppressibility to demographic and clinical characteristics

Age was positively correlated with tic suppressibility, r = 0.34, p = 0.001, such that older children demonstrated a greater degree of tic suppression (Figure 2). There was no gender difference in tic suppressibility, t = −1.19, p = 0.23. Tic suppressibility did not differ based on the presence of any psychiatric comorbidity (t = −0.28, p = 0.77) nor specifically in terms of ADHD (t = 0.95, p = 0.34), anxiety disorder (t = −0.02, p = 0.98), or OCD status (t = −0.43, p = 0.67).
Figure 2

Tic suppressibility as a function of age. Hashed line represents a least-squares regression line fitted to the data.

Tic suppressibility as a function of age. Hashed line represents a least-squares regression line fitted to the data. There was no difference in tic suppressibility for those taking vs. not taking a psychotropic medication, t = −0.73, p = 0.46. No differences in tic suppressibility were found for specific medication classes: antipsychotic (n = 8), U = 329.0, p = 0.72; stimulant (n = 9), U = 277.0, p = 0.13; α2 adrenergic agonist (n = 12), U = 431.0, p = 0.38; SRI (n = 10), U = 320.0, p = 0.17. Baseline tic frequencies and tic suppressibility were significantly correlated (r = 0.26, p = 0.007), such that those with more frequent tics at baseline showed greater tic suppressibility. Correlations of tic suppressibility with YGTSS-measured tic severity (r = 0.18, p = 0.07) and with PUTS-rated premonitory urge severity (r = 0.15, p = 0.15) were in the same direction but not significant. Self-rated ability to suppress tics, as measured by item 10 on the PUTS, was not significantly correlated with our objective tic suppressibility metric (r = 0.18, p = 0.15).

Discussion

We evaluated reinforced tic suppression and its correlates using data from 99 youth with TDs pooled across nine studies. Results showed that a large majority of youth achieved robust tic suppression when attempting to suppress tics in the presence of a supporting reward contingency, but significant inter-individual heterogeneity in tic suppressibility was also observed. Results regarding correlates of tic suppression were only partially consistent with a priori predictions: tic suppressibility was positively related to child age (older children tended to suppress more effectively) but not significantly related to premonitory urge severity or ADHD diagnosis. That robust tic suppression was observed in a majority of participants may be seen as unsurprising, given positive results of prior studies whose data contributed to this study. However, the nature of interindividual variability in tic suppressibility has been difficult to characterize in previous small studies. Though a large majority demonstrated a high degree of tic suppression (i.e., 70% of youth had at least a 50% decrease in tic frequency), we also observed sizable portions of the sample to show particularly striking patterns of suppression, including 20% who had near complete suppression, 10% who seemed unable to suppress, and 7% whose tics worsened during SUP. It is critical to note that results describe tic suppressibility in an austere lab setting with an immediate reward contingency supporting suppression. Thus, the ability of these participants to suppress tics under naturalistic conditions is unknown. Behavioral interventions (e.g., CBIT) focus on tic suppression practice in everyday life; thus, the present findings do not suggest that most youth with tics already have the same tic suppressing repertoire which behavior therapies aspire to develop. Instead, we suggest that most youth naive to behavior therapy can indeed voluntarily suppress tics under certain, “ideal” conditions. Therapy focuses on enhancing suppression abilities and generalizing them to more naturalistic contexts, so that skills may be utilized concurrently with engagement in normal activities and in the absence of contrived reinforcement contingencies. Whether tic suppressibility during the TST in treatment naive youth predicts response to CBIT remains an empirical question that, if explored, could help determine the potential application of the TST as an assessment tool. From an experimental perspective, the notion that tic suppression can be experimentally induced for most children confirms the utility of this paradigm for systematic tests of how extraneous factors perturb or enhance tic suppression, such as contextual events or medication inductions. The finding that tic suppressibility improves with age is a novel finding consistent with a neurodevelopmental view of TDs. The ability to suppress interfering actions develops throughout childhood and adolescence and is driven by functional and structural maturation of the prefrontal-striatal network (33). Although TDs are associated with atypical function in control-related regions (34, 35), based on maturation alone we would still expect older youth to have greater top-down control of tics compared to their younger counterparts. The notion that older people with tics develop altered or compensatory neurofunctional organization of motor control networks as a result of tic suppression experience has also been proposed to explain findings that those with TDs tend to show normative or enhanced behavioral performance on motor control tasks (36, 37, 38). Given that suppression occurred in the context of reward, it is also possible that the age finding reflects the particular heightened responsiveness to reward in adolescence vs. both childhood and adulthood, which has been attributed to imbalanced maturation of limbic regions relative to cortical control regions (39). Alternatively, age-related differences may simply be due to the fact that older children have experienced longer illness duration, lending greater opportunity to naturally develop and practice short-term tic suppression strategies. Testing youth longitudinally with the TST may inform developmental models of tic suppression. The clinical relevance of the age finding remains unclear given that the relationship between tic suppression on the TST and behavior therapy response is untested. The seminal CBIT trial demonstrated efficacy in youth ages 9 years and above (40), and age did not moderate outcome (41). However, as the Greene et al. (13) study indicated (included in this pooled dataset), even younger children demonstrate some tic inhibition capacity. Future research exploring the relationship between the TST and CBIT response may help refine our understanding of the “optimal” or minimal age to implement CBIT. It is also important to acknowledge that tic suppressibility is unlikely to be the sole moderator of behavior therapy outcome; for example, other developmentally sensitive patient characteristics such as tic awareness and motivation likely also contribute to response. The presence of comorbid psychiatric disorders was not associated with differential tic suppressibility. Although comorbidity has been shown to adversely impact psychosocial functioning in those with TDs [e.g., (42)], the literature has been inconclusive in terms of comorbidity effects specifically on tic suppressibility. Interestingly, although anxiety disorders have been found to predict poorer response to CBIT (41), we found no evidence of impaired tic suppression in youth with comorbid anxiety. ADHD has been the disorder most frequently hypothesized to be detrimental to tic suppression, based on the rationale that tic suppression involves attentional and inhibitory control mechanisms that are impaired in those with ADHD. Our results are consistent with previous studies showing that youth with ADHD can achieve robust tic suppression (14) and benefit comparably from CBIT (41). As ADHD is known to have a heterogeneous neurocognitive profile (43), tic suppression may be related to neurocognitive and/or learning processes that are implicated in ADHD, rather than related directly to the ADHD clinical phenotype. One interesting consideration is whether suppression contingent reinforcement might mitigate the impact of ADHD on tic suppression, which would be consistent with research showing enhanced sensitivity to reward in children with ADHD (44). This possibility could be tested by comparing tic suppressibility with and without a supporting reward contingency in children both with and without ADHD. Empirical evaluation of this possibility might guide treatment refinement, as it could indicate whether reinforcement to enhance suppression bolsters treatment response in youth with tics and ADHD. We also found no difference in tic suppressibility related to psychotropic medication status. This parallels previous research showing that dexmethylphenidate does not impair tic suppression during the TST in youth with tics and ADHD (14). We did not find evidence of impaired tic suppression among youth taking antipsychotic medication, which is incongruent with findings showing blunted response to CBIT among individuals on these medications (41). However, null findings in terms of medication class effects should be interpreted with caution given the small numbers of children taking specific medications. It is also notable that medicated youth in this sample still met study entry criteria involving a moderate degree of tic severity, meaning that they could be undertreated or medication non-/sub-optimal responders. Future research could use the TST to more rigorously test whether specific medications impact tic suppression, either in an experimental fashion (14) or as a pre-post assessment when medication withdrawal is not feasible. We did not find a significant relationship between tic suppressibility and tic severity, as measured by the YGTSS. This finding may reflect the notion that tic generation and tic suppression are separate processes subserved by different loops of cortico-striatal-thalamo-cortical (CSTC) circuits (45). Findings may also reflect measurement variance. The YGTSS total score is a global rating of multiple dimensions of tic symptomatology over the previous week. Of these dimensions, tic frequency has been the sole dependent variable in TST studies. How suppression efforts impact other symptom dimensions, such as tic intensity or complexity, remains unknown and should be tested in future research. It is notable that a significant correlation was found between tic frequency at baseline and tic suppressibility, such that youth with more frequent tics during BL showed a greater degree of suppression. While it is possible that this finding is a measurement artifact (i.e., more frequent tics yield more opportunity to have a larger change score), it may also be the case that more frequent tics afford more “real life” practice in suppression, which could enhance skills related to suppression (e.g., greater awareness of tic sensations, naturally formed competing motor behaviors) and development of compensatory neurocircuits. Tic suppressibility was not significantly correlated with PUTS-rated premonitory urge severity. Behavioral models have conceptualized premonitory urges as a facilitator of tic suppression, as they provide salient cues to initiate tic inhibition (6). In recent years, findings, including those in the current study, call this idea into question (13, 23, 24, 46), instead suggesting that the urge-tic relationship is heterogeneous across individuals and more nuanced than once thought [(5, 17, 22)]. For example, in the CBIT trials (41), individuals with higher PUTS scores demonstrated blunted treatment response, raising the possibility that higher urges are associated with a more treatment-refractory form of TD. Neuroimaging studies indicate that distinct neural circuits subserve tic and urge generation (45, 47), suggesting that the two processes are at the least dissociable, even if not necessarily dissociated under all conditions. Our reliance on the PUTS as a measure of urge severity may also have influenced results. Recent psychometric testing of the PUTS suggests that the PUTS does not show strong associations with real-time urge intensity monitoring and may measure more than one dimension of the urge experience [e.g., both quality and intensity of urge sensations; (48)]. Re-examination of the urge-tic suppressibility relationship will be important if the PUTS undergoes further refinement to improve its sensitivity to measure multiple urge dimensions. Interestingly, our objective measure of tic suppressibility was not significantly associated with self-rated tic suppression ability, as measured by item 10 of the PUTS. This finding is consistent with other research demonstrating the unreliability of subjective reports of tic severity (25). For example, in a study by Barnea et al. (49), youth with tics subjectively rated tic experiences across several daily-life situations, and tic frequencies were then objectively measured for these situations (e.g., watching television, doing homework, being alone). Associations between subjective and objective measures of tic expression were moderate to low, challenging the long-standing clinical assumption that the affected individual is able to accurately report on his/her own tics. Our study suggests that subjective ratings of tic suppressibility may also be susceptible to self-report biases, further highlighting the clinical importance of including objective measurements in tic assessment. Our findings have implications for future research. Mechanistic work is needed to identify the reasons for heterogeneous patterns of tic suppression across individuals. Based on our current findings and the prior literature, it now seems clear that variables capturing broad clinical characteristics are not useful as predictors or moderators of tic suppressibility and are therefore unlikely to shed light into the mechanisms underlying suppression or to have prognostic utility. Candidate mechanisms should be explored using fine-grained, transdiagnostic variables that provide better insights into brain-context-behavior interactions that drive tic suppressibility. The TST continues to hold strong promise as a method for probing mechanisms underlying tic suppression, particularly because it is a well-established laboratory task that can be paired with examination of other units of analysis (e.g., neurocircuitry). As researchers continue to use the TST, attention should also be paid to understanding how the design and implementation of the task itself may influence findings. The extent to which results are comparable to findings from studies using other direct observation tic suppression paradigms is unclear. For example, other paradigms have focused on assessing tic suppression without a supporting reinforcement contingency and measured tics using multidimensional symptom ratings (25, 31). Given that tics are known to be highly reactive to contextual factors (11), it is possible that seemingly minor methodological differences between paradigms impact findings, such as the wording of instructions to suppress. Our understanding of task specific effects might be improved with direct comparisons between different suppression paradigms and dissemination of paradigm methods in greater detail. Limitations of the current study include those inherent to combining a dataset across studies, such as statistical weaknesses associated with secondary analyses, method variance across projects, possible uncontrolled or unmeasured site effects, and access to only a limited range of variables that were common across studies. We did not have access to information about medication indications, and only a small number of participants were taking medications in each examined medication class. Some studies had inclusion criteria related to scores of measures examined in correlational analyses [i.e., all but the (13) study had criteria reflecting minimum YGTSS scores; (15) required a particular PUTS score]. Finally, continuous measures of comorbidity were not available. Although comorbidity rates parallel those reported for clinical trials with similar inclusion/exclusion criteria (50), rates are lower than those expected in the general TD population. In conclusion, our results indicate that a large majority of youth with tic disorders are able to achieve robust tic suppression in a laboratory tic suppression paradigm. Better tic suppressibility was related to older age and more frequent tics but unrelated to other clinical variables. The mechanisms underlying the observed heterogeneity in tic suppressibility warrant further investigation, as enhancement of tic suppression is a key treatment target. The TST holds promise as a method for subtyping TD samples to more precisely identify mechanisms driving differential tic suppression ability, predicting response to behavioral interventions, or matching individuals to treatment components, consistent with a personalized medicine approach.

Author contributions

All authors were involved in data collection. CC and MC: led project conception, organization, and execution, designed the analytic approach, and wrote the first draft. CC: conducted data analyses. BW: created the study database. All authors edited, reviewed, and approved the final version of the manuscript.

Conflict of interest statement

CC reports grant support from the National Institute of Mental Health. DW reports grant support in partnership with PsycTech for development of www.tichelper.com; grant support and speaker fees from the Tourette Association of America; and royalties from Oxford University Press, Guilford Press, and Springer Press. DG reports grant support from the National Institute of Mental Health. MH reports grant support from the National Institutes of Health and grant support, speaker fees, and honoraria from the Tourette Association of America. MC reports research funding from the American Academy of Neurology and Tourette Association of America, The Health Trust, and the Center for California Studies; he also has received honoraria from Sanofi Genzyme for presenting about mindfulness at events for individuals with multiple sclerosis. KB reports grant support from the National Institute of Mental Health, The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research, and Barnes-Jewish Hospital Foundation, clinical trials support from Neurocrine Biosciences, Inc., Sunovion Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Acadia Pharmaceuticals, Inc., and speakers bureau and advisory board compensation from Acadia. BW, MS, and H-JL declares that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
  46 in total

1.  Cognitive control over motor output in Tourette syndrome.

Authors:  Jeyoung Jung; Stephen R Jackson; Amy Parkinson; Georgina M Jackson
Journal:  Neurosci Biobehav Rev       Date:  2012-09-25       Impact factor: 8.989

2.  A functional magnetic resonance imaging study of tic suppression in Tourette syndrome.

Authors:  B S Peterson; P Skudlarski; A W Anderson; H Zhang; J C Gatenby; C M Lacadie; J F Leckman; J C Gore
Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry       Date:  1998-04

3.  Effects of tic suppression: ability to suppress, rebound, negative reinforcement, and habituation to the premonitory urge.

Authors:  Matt W Specht; Douglas W Woods; Cassandra M Nicotra; Laura M Kelly; Emily J Ricketts; Christine A Conelea; Marco A Grados; Rick S Ostrander; John T Walkup
Journal:  Behav Res Ther       Date:  2012-10-13

4.  Tourette patients' misbelief of a tic rebound is due to overall difficulties in reliable tic rating.

Authors:  Kirsten R Müller-Vahl; Laura Riemann; Stefanie Bokemeyer
Journal:  J Psychosom Res       Date:  2014-03-24       Impact factor: 3.006

5.  Testing tic suppression: comparing the effects of dexmethylphenidate to no medication in children and adolescents with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and Tourette's disorder.

Authors:  Gholson J Lyon; Stephanie M Samar; Christine Conelea; Marcel R Trujillo; Christina M Lipinski; Christopher C Bauer; Bryan C Brandt; Joshua J Kemp; Zoe E Lawrence; Jonathan Howard; F Xavier Castellanos; Douglas Woods; Barbara J Coffey
Journal:  J Child Adolesc Psychopharmacol       Date:  2010-08       Impact factor: 2.576

6.  Premonitory sensory phenomena and suppressibility of tics in Tourette syndrome: developmental aspects in children and adolescents.

Authors:  Tobias Banaschewski; Wolfgang Woerner; Aribert Rothenberger
Journal:  Dev Med Child Neurol       Date:  2003-10       Impact factor: 5.449

7.  Sensory experiences of Gilles de la Tourette syndrome.

Authors:  J Bliss
Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry       Date:  1980-12

8.  Investigating Habituation to Premonitory Urges in Behavior Therapy for Tic Disorders.

Authors:  David C Houghton; Matthew R Capriotti; Lawrence D Scahill; Sabine Wilhelm; Alan L Peterson; John T Walkup; John Piacentini; Douglas W Woods
Journal:  Behav Ther       Date:  2017-08-10

9.  Moderators and predictors of response to behavior therapy for tics in Tourette syndrome.

Authors:  Denis G Sukhodolsky; Douglas W Woods; John Piacentini; Sabine Wilhelm; Alan L Peterson; Lily Katsovich; James Dziura; John T Walkup; Lawrence Scahill
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  2017-02-15       Impact factor: 9.910

10.  Control networks in paediatric Tourette syndrome show immature and anomalous patterns of functional connectivity.

Authors:  Jessica A Church; Damien A Fair; Nico U F Dosenbach; Alexander L Cohen; Francis M Miezin; Steven E Petersen; Bradley L Schlaggar
Journal:  Brain       Date:  2008-10-24       Impact factor: 13.501

View more
  11 in total

1.  Tic Suppression in Children With Recent-Onset Tics Predicts 1-Year Tic Outcome.

Authors:  Soyoung Kim; Deanna J Greene; Amy Robichaux-Viehoever; Emily C Bihun; Jonathan M Koller; Haley Acevedo; Bradley L Schlaggar; Kevin J Black
Journal:  J Child Neurol       Date:  2019-06-26       Impact factor: 1.987

2.  Inhibitory control in youth with Tourette's Disorder, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and their combination and predictors of objective tic suppressibility.

Authors:  Alexandra Sturm; Emily J Ricketts; Joseph F McGuire; Juliette Lerner; SoJeong Lee; Sandra K Loo; James J McGough; Susanna Chang; Douglas W Woods; James McCracken; John Piacentini
Journal:  Psychiatry Res       Date:  2021-08-05       Impact factor: 11.225

3.  Premonitory Awareness Facilitates Tic Suppression: Subscales of the Premonitory Urge for Tics Scale and a New Self-Report Questionnaire for Tic-Associated Sensations.

Authors:  Natsumi Matsuda; Maiko Nonaka; Toshiaki Kono; Miyuki Fujio; Marina Nobuyoshi; Yukiko Kano
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2020-07-03       Impact factor: 4.157

4.  TicTimer Web: software for measuring tic suppression remotely.

Authors:  Jonathan K Black; Jonathan M Koller; Kevin J Black
Journal:  F1000Res       Date:  2020-10-22

Review 5.  Tourette syndrome research highlights from 2019.

Authors:  Andreas Hartmann; Yulia Worbe; Kevin J Black
Journal:  F1000Res       Date:  2020-11-11

6.  Acute and Long-Term Effects of an Internet-Based, Self-Help Comprehensive Behavioral Intervention for Children and Teens with Tic Disorders with Comorbid Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, or Obsessive Compulsive Disorder: A Reanalysis of Data from a Randomized Controlled Trial.

Authors:  Lilach Rachamim; Hila Mualem-Taylor; Osnat Rachamim; Michael Rotstein; Sharon Zimmerman-Brenner
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2021-12-23       Impact factor: 4.241

7.  Correlates and clinical implications of tic suppressibility.

Authors:  Keisuke Ueda; Soyoung Kim; Deanna J Greene; Kevin J Black
Journal:  Curr Dev Disord Rep       Date:  2021-04-04

8.  TicTimer software for measuring tic suppression.

Authors:  Jonathan K Black; Jonathan M Koller; Kevin J Black
Journal:  F1000Res       Date:  2017-08-24

9.  Software for web-based tic suppression training.

Authors:  Jonathan K Black; Kevin J Black
Journal:  F1000Res       Date:  2017-12-19

10.  European clinical guidelines for Tourette syndrome and other tic disorders-version 2.0. Part II: psychological interventions.

Authors:  Per Andrén; Ewgeni Jakubovski; Tara L Murphy; Katrin Woitecki; Zsanett Tarnok; Sharon Zimmerman-Brenner; Jolande van de Griendt; Nanette Mol Debes; Paula Viefhaus; Sally Robinson; Veit Roessner; Christos Ganos; Natalia Szejko; Kirsten R Müller-Vahl; Danielle Cath; Andreas Hartmann; Cara Verdellen
Journal:  Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry       Date:  2021-07-27       Impact factor: 4.785

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.