| Literature DB >> 30005612 |
Jennie Hayes1, Tamsin Ford2, Hateem Rafeeque2, Ginny Russell2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Research suggests that diagnostic procedures for Autism Spectrum Disorder are not consistent across practice and that diagnostic rates can be affected by contextual and social drivers. The purpose of this review was to consider how the content of clinical practice guidelines shapes diagnoses of Autism Spectrum Disorder in the UK; and investigate where, within those guidelines, social factors and influences are considered.Entities:
Keywords: Autism spectrum disorder; Clinical guideline; Clinical judgement; Diagnosis; Diagnostic uncertainty; Narrative review; Social factors
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30005612 PMCID: PMC6044100 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-018-1800-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
| Inclusion Criteria | |
| Documents with guidance-based status for HCPs working in secondary care in the UK; or were published papers, aimed at HCPs, with the aim of reviewing CPGs | |
| Documents related to autism diagnosis and assessment for either children, adults or both | |
| Documents produced either by or through government or professional clinical bodies or published in a journal aimed at HCPs | |
| Documents related to diagnosis and assessment in UK (England, Scotland, Wales and N Ireland) | |
| Documents dated from 2009 (reflecting publication of the first UK specific Autism Act) or were the most recent CPG published by a key professional body | |
| Exclusion Criteria | |
| Documents related solely to referral, treatment, prognosis or support services | |
| Reviews of diagnostic criteria and other academic papers | |
| Guidelines related to primary care as we were interested in diagnosis rather than referral | |
| Narrative reviews, editorials and opinions | |
| Documents related to parliament or legislature; national or regional strategies as they are not the primary source for clinicians | |
| Local guidance | |
| Guidance provided by private providers of diagnostic services | |
| International professional body guidelines (other than ICD/DSM) |
Purpose of Diagnostic Guidelines
| Type of guideline | General purpose of type of guideline |
|---|---|
| Diagnostic Criteria | To assist clinicians in the diagnosis of mental conditions by providing descriptions of the main clinical features in each category |
| National Clinical Guidelines | To offer best practice advice and guidance for professionals and service users and their families |
| Guidelines from Professional Bodies | To offer profession specific advice to clinicians and healthcare professionals in their specialist area |
| Journal Articles | To summarise clinical guidelines in clinician-facing publications to keep clinicians up to date and/or alert them to changes in good practice |
Fig. 1Full Search Strategy
Fig. 2Study selection flow diagram
Key characteristics of guidelines
| Title | Year | Author(s) | Publisher/Journal | Geographical remit | Target audience | Age range | Range of diagnoses covered | Diagnostic criteria referred to | Age at which symptoms are recognised |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||||
| The ICD-10 Classification of Mental and Behavioural Disorders: clinical descriptions and diagnostic guidelines [ | 1993 | N/A | World Health Organisation | International | Clinical, educational and service use | All ages | Pervasive development disorders | N/A | Before age of 3 years (childhood autism); after age 3 (atypical autism). |
| Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (Fifth Edition) [ | 2013 | N/A | American Psychiatric Association | International | Clinicians, students, practitioners, researchers | All ages | Autism Spectrum Disorder | N/A | During 2nd year of life (12–24 months) or earlier than 12 months if developmental delays are severe |
|
| |||||||||
| NICE Autism in under 19 s: recognition, referral and diagnosis (NICE CG128) [ | 2011 | National Collaborating Centre for Women’s and Children’s Health | National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) | England and Wales | Healthcare professionals | From birth up to 19 years | Pervasive developmental disorder (PDD) | ICD-10 or DSM-IV | May be uncertainty before 24 months, or with developmental age of less than 18 months |
| Six Steps of Autism Care for children and young people in Northern Ireland (RASDN) [ | 2011 | Regional Autistic Disorder Network for Northern Ireland | Health and Social Care Board | Northern Ireland | Health care and education professionals, parents, carers, service users and providers. | Up to the age of 18 years | Autism spectrum disorder | ICD-10, DSM-IV, NICE, SIGN, NZ Guidelines, NHS Map of Medicine | Pre-school. Language delay by the age of two years. |
| Autism Spectrum Disorder in adults: diagnosis and management (NICE CG142) [ | 2012 | National Collaborating Centre for Mental Health | National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) | England and Wales | Health and social care providers and commissioners | Adults aged 18 and over | Autism spectrum disorders | N/S | N/A |
| Autism Adult Care Pathway (RASDN) [ | 2013 | Regional Autistic Spectrum Disorder Network | Health and Social Care Board | Northern Ireland | Professionals, adults and families | Adults from age 18 | Autism spectrum disorders | DSM-5 and ICD-10, NICE guidance CG142. | N/S |
| Assessment, diagnosis and interventions for autism spectrum disorders: A national clinical guideline (SIGN 145) [ | 2016 | N/A | Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network | Scotland | Healthcare professionals | Whole age range | Autism spectrum disorder | ICD-10 and DSM-5 | Autism can be reliably diagnosed between the ages of 2–3. |
|
| |||||||||
| RCSLT (Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists Clinical Guidelines (Autism) [ | 2005 | N/A | Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists | UK | Speech and language therapists | Children and adults | Autism spectrum disorder | ICIDH-2 | N/S |
| Good practice in the management of autism (including Asperger syndrome) in adults (RCPych CR191) [ | 2014 | Royal College of Psychiatrists | Royal College of Psychiatrists | UK | Psychiatrists working with adults of at least normal intellectual ability | Adults from age 18 | Autism | ICD-10, DSM-5, NICE, 2012. | N/S |
| Autism Spectrum Disorders: Guidance for Psychologists (BPS) [ | 2016 | Stuart-Hamilton, Dillenburger, Hood & Austin | British Psychological Society | UK | Psychologists | All ages | Autism Spectrum Disorder | ICD-10 and DSM-5, NICE, 2011. | Both diagnostic manuals consider ASD indicators to be present by the age of 36 months although some children can be identified under the age of 24 months. |
| BMJ Best Practice online resource [ | 2017 | Parr &Woodbury-Smith | British Medical Journal | Outside US and Canada | Medical Practitioners | All ages | Autism Spectrum Disorder | DSM-IV, DSM-5 & ICD-10. NICE, SIGN, AACAP, AAP, NZ ASD guideline, AAN | More than 80% of children with ASD show clear behavioural signs by the age of 24 months, some indicators in 12–18 months |
|
| |||||||||
| Diagnosis and management of autism in childhood [ | 2011 | Blenner, Reddy & Augustyn | British Medical Journal | N/S | General clinicians | Children | Autism Spectrum Disorder | DSM-IV TR or ICD-10 | N/S |
| Diagnosis and assessment in autism spectrum disorders [ | 2012 | Carpenter | Advances in Mental Health and Intellectual disabilities | N/S | Those designing and providing diagnostic services | All ages | Autism Spectrum Disorder | DSM-IV TR or ICD-10. Gillberg’s for AS. There are others but few use them (Kopra et al., 2008; Chiappedi et al., 2010). | N/S |
| Autism spectrum disorder in adults: clinical features and the role of the psychiatrist [ | 2013 | Garland, O’Rourke & Robertson | Advances in Psychiatric Treatment | UK | Psychiatrists | Adults | Autism Spectrum Disorders | ICD-10 and DSM-5, NICE | To satisfy ICD-10 criteria for childhood autism, impairments must manifest before the age of 3 years |
| Recognising, referring and diagnosing autism [ | 2012 | Howlett & Richman | Every Child Journal | England and Wales | Professionals working with children and young people | Children and young people | Autism | NICE | The core autism behaviours are typically present in early childhood; but features can appear different with age or change with circumstances |
| Autism [ | 2013 | Lai, Lombardo & Baron-Cohen | The Lancet | N/S | N/S | All ages | Autism or the autism spectrum | DSM-5, ICD-10 | N/S |
| Autism [ | 2009 | Levy, Mandell & Schultz | The Lancet | N/S | N/S | N/S but primarily talks about children | Autism Spectrum Disorder | DSM-IV and ICD-10 | Parents often aware from age 18 months, a diagnosis is often not made until 2 years after the initial expression of parental concern. |
| Autism spectrum disorder: diagnosis and management [ | 2009 | O’Hare | Archives of Disease in Childhood: Education and Practice Edition | N/S but relates primarily to SIGN guidelines | Paediatricians | Children and young people | Autism Spectrum Disorder | ICD-10 and DSM-IV, SIGN | N/S |
| Recognition, referral, diagnosis, and management of adults with autism: summary of NICE guidance [ | 2012 | Pilling, Baron-Cohen, Megnin-Viggars, Lee & Taylor | British Medical Journal | England and Wales | N/S | Adults | Autism | N/S | N/S |
| Autism Spectrum Disorders in childhood: a clinical update [ | 2011 | Reynolds | Community Practitioner | UK | Community practitioners | Children | Autism Spectrum Disorder | ICD-10, DSM-IV | N/S |
| The NICE guideline on recognition, referral, diagnosis and management of adults on the autism spectrum [ | 2014 | Wilson, Roberts, Gillan, Ohlsen, Robertson & Zinkstok | Advances in Mental Health and Intellectual Disabilities | England and Wales | Health care professionals, service managers, service users, practitioners | All adults | Autism spectrum disorder | N/S | N/S |
aPre 2009 but constitutes current guideline in use from RCSLT
bCurrently under review but represents the most recent published guideline from BPS
Fig. 3Social factors in clinical guidelines
Key diagnostic recommendations
| CPG | Recommended tools | MDT recommended | MDT membership | Assessment targets | Key features of assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| ICD-10 (1993) [ | N/S | N/S | N/S | N/S | Diagnose on the basis of behavioural features |
| DSM-5 (2013) [ | No specific tool | N/S | N/S | N/S | Careful clinical history & summary of social, psychological & biological factors. |
|
| |||||
| NICE CG128 (2011) [ | No specific tool recommended | Autism team members should carry out assessment (short version). A diagnosis can be made by a single experienced HCP; profile of strengths & weaknesses is essential, and requires MDT [ | Autism team made up of Paediatrician &/or Child & Adolescent Psychiatrist, SLT, Clinical &/or Educational Psychologist & access to paediatrician/paediatric neurologist, Child & Adolescent Psychiatrist, Educational Psychologist, Clinical Psychologist, OT, if not in team. Also consider specialist health visitor or nurse, specialist teacher or social worker. | Start the autism diagnostic assessment within 3 months of referral. Follow up appointment within 6 weeks of assessment. | Seek report from the pre-school or school; gather additional health or social care information. Include in every autism diagnostic assessment: |
| RASDN (2011) [ | No specific tool | The use of MDT approach is necessary | Involving at least two disciplines: paediatrician; child psychiatrist; SLT, OT, clinical psychologist; specialist health visitor; mental health practitioner (CAMHS); social worker; nurse; ed. psych. Teacher; other trained professionals | Referral screened within 5 days. Info provided within 4 weeks. 13 weeks to first appointment. Feedback within 4 weeks, report within 6 weeks of formulation. | Step one: Initial directed conversation. |
| NICE CG142 (2012) [ | Comprehensive assessment should be team based (short version). At a minimum by a qualified clinician usually a clinical psychologist, psychiatrist or neurologist [ | Specialist autism team made up of: Clinical Psychologists, Nurses, OTs, Psychiatrists, Social Workers, SLTs, Support Staff | N/S | During a comprehensive assessment, enquire about and assess the following: | |
| RASDN (2013) [ | Diagnosis must be team based & draw on a range of professionals. | At least two of: clinical psychology (core), psychiatry, SLT, LD/MH nursing; OT, other appropriately trained professionals. | Final report to be provided within 6 weeks of assessment. | As an absolute minimum, elements 2, 3 & 4 | |
| SIGN 145 (2016) [ | MDT … should be considered as the optimum approach | Experienced professionals | N/S | • History taking (informant interview): prenatal, perinatal & developmental history; description of the current problems experienced; family history; description of who is in family; coexisting conditions and differential diagnoses | |
|
| |||||
| RCSLT (2005) [ | N/S | Should always be multidisciplinary & multi-agency to achieve optimum benefit. | This may include SLT, child psychology, child psychiatry, clinical psychology, paediatrician, EdPsych., OT & teacher | N/S | During assessment, consideration must be given to the triad of social impairments, as well as theories relating to the triad, for example sensory sensitivity and integration; intersubjectivity; executive functioning deficits; motivation; memory and central coherence. |
| RCPsych (2014) [ | NICE advocates multidisciplinary exercise, but psychiatrists might be expected to diagnose straightforward cases & be alert to indications for a more specialist assessment. | MDT usually includes psychology & nursing as core membership | N/S | • Speak with informant | |
| BPS (2016) [ | e.g. ADOS, ADI, DISCO, ADI-R | It is recommended that assessment is multidisciplinary. | At least one psychologist, in addition to other relevant personnel, such as OTs, mental health workers etc. | It is recommended that assessment is timely. | The taking of a developmental history with carers as well as observation across different settings. Information from a range of sources. Psychologists contribution to identification and assessment may include: |
| BMJ (2017) [ | Diagnosis should be confirmed or made by an appropriately trained professional, ideally working as part of MDT | Paediatricians, child psychiatrists, adult psychiatrists or psychologists, & other professionals | N/S | A combination of: | |
|
| |||||
| Blenner et al (2011) [ | Paediatric neurologists, developmental & behavioural paediatricians, child psychiatrists or psychologists, or, ideally, MDT. | N/S | N/S | Comprehensive evaluation that includes | |
| Carpenter (2012) [ | Diagnosis can be made by one clinician. Wider assessment requires a team. A variety of professionals can diagnose. | N/S | Labour intensive - up to 8 h to make & document diagnosis. | Three elements (judged against criteria of ICD-10 or DSM-4): | |
| Garland et al. (2013) [ | When mental health difficulties also exist, the expertise of the wider MDT is likely to be engaged. | Outlines psychiatrist’s role. | Enough time should be set aside | • History of presenting complaint | |
| Howlett & Richman (2011) [ | No specific tool | If the local autism team does not have the skills to assess these children themselves, they should liaise with professionals who are able to do so | Minimum, paediatrician &/or child & adolescent psychiatrist, SLT & clinical &/or Ed.Psych. Other professionals … specialist health visitor, nurse, specialist teacher, social worker | Timely & appropriate. Follow up appointment within six weeks of assessment | Should provide detailed developmental profile. Based on NICE guidance. |
| Lai et al....... (2013) [ | Assessment needs to be multidisciplinary | N/S | N/S | • Interview with the parent or caregiver | |
| Levy et al (2009) [ | These assessments should be multidisciplinary | The MDT should include clinicians skilled in speech & language therapy, occupational therapy, education, psychology, & social work. | • Use ICD or DSM criteria | ||
| O’Hare (2009) [ | A multidisciplinary diagnostic approach is recommended | Paediatricians are essential members. | N/S | • Direct clinical structured observations | |
| Pilling et al. (2012) [ | N/S | N/S | N/S | Inquire about & assess the following: | |
| Reynolds (2011) [ | No specific tool | N/S | N/S | N/S | Observed behaviours with patient presenting symptoms from ‘Triad of Impairments’: social interaction, social communication, social imagination |
| Wilson et al (2013) [ | Should be carried out by MDT consisting of professionals who have experience in diagnosing autism (from NICE). | N/S | N/S | A comprehensive assessment of autism should involve an assessment of | |
Key OT Occupational Therapist, SLT Speech and Language Therapist, HCP Healthcare professional, MDT Multidisciplinary team, Ed.Psych Educational Psychologist