| Literature DB >> 32316911 |
Angela John Thurman1,2, Laura A Potter3,4, Kyoungmi Kim3,5, Flora Tassone3,6, Amy Banasik3,7, Sarah Nelson Potter3,8, Lauren Bullard3,8, Vivian Nguyen3,7, Andrea McDuffie3,7, Randi Hagerman3,4, Leonard Abbeduto3,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to conduct a 20-week controlled trial of lovastatin (10 to 40 mg/day) in youth with fragile X syndrome (FXS) ages 10 to 17 years, combined with an open-label treatment of a parent-implemented language intervention (PILI), delivered via distance video teleconferencing to both treatment groups, lovastatin and placebo.Entities:
Keywords: Distance teleconferencing; Expressive language sampling; Fragile X syndrome; Lovastatin; Narrative storytelling; PILI; Parent-implemented language intervention
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32316911 PMCID: PMC7175541 DOI: 10.1186/s11689-020-09315-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurodev Disord ISSN: 1866-1947 Impact factor: 4.025
Fig. 1Consolidated standards of reporting trials (CONSORT) flow diagram of subject disposition
Descriptive statistics of patient characteristics at pre-treatment clinic visit
| Measure | Lovastatin | Placebo | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 14 | 16 | ||
| 2 | 0 | ||
| Age | 13.86 ± 2.14 | 13.17 ± 2.54 | 0.4307 |
| Sex | 0.2092 | ||
| Male | 12 | 16 | |
| Female | 2 | 0 | |
| Race/ethnicity | 0.05 | ||
| Caucasian | 14 | 10 | |
| Hispanic | 0 | 4 | |
| African American | 0 | 1 | |
| Asian | 0 | 1 | |
| Leiter-R Brief IQ standard score | 44.00 ± 9.22 | 43.13 ± 6.24 | 0.7604 |
| Leiter-R growth score | 461.40 ± 13.32 | 462.30 ± 8.57 | 0.8273 |
| ADOS-2 comparison score | 6.85 ± 2.54 | 6.75 ± 2.05 | 0.911 |
| Parent education level | 0.764 | ||
| HS grad/GED | 0 | 1 | |
| BA/BS | 5 | 6 | |
| Master’s degree + | 4 | 4 | |
| Some college | 2 | 5 | |
| Some grad work | 1 | 0 | |
Description of the specific PILI verbal response strategies
| Recasts | Models of a more mature version of the youth’s verbalization that provided an opportunity to learn new linguistic means of expressing the same meaning (e.g., “boy run” could be recast as “the boy is running in the yard.”). Recasts also serve to acknowledge and reinforce the youth’s conversational turn. |
| WH questions | Open-ended WH questions (e.g., “What is the boy doing?” and “How is the boy feeling?”) that prompt the child to provide an on-topic verbal response, engage the youth with FXS in the storytelling activity, support his/her practice of language skills, and improve the youth’s understanding of story details as well as his/her ability to retell the story in his/her own words. The youth’s responses provide an opportunity for the parent to recast the youth’s verbalization or provide story-related talking to model the appropriate response. |
| Fill-in-the-blank (FIB) prompts | Starting a sentence and then using a rising intonation and pause to mark an expectation that the youth with FXS is to complete the sentence (e.g., “the doggy is being chased by the …” that prompts the youth to say, “girl”). FIBs convey to the youth that an on-topic response is expected and support successful participation in the storytelling, but with minimal linguistic demands on the youth with FXS. The youth’s responses to a FIB prompt provided an opportunity for the parent to recast the youth’s verbalization or provide story-related talking to model the appropriate response. |
Description of the PILI sessions conducted each week
| Coaching session | The clinician delivered a real-time coaching session to the parent as he/she interacted with the youth with FXS in shared storytelling. The coaching was provided to the parent via a single earbud headphone so that the child could not hear the clinician. |
| Homework session | The parent independently video-recorded a homework session in which he/she engaged in a shared storytelling activity with the youth with FXS using the same book as in coaching. The video was uploaded to the clinician via a secure cloud-based platform. |
| Feedback session | The clinician provided feedback to the parent regarding the homework in a VTC session. |
| Final storytelling session | The clinician observed, without coaching or intervention, a final storytelling session between parent and youth with FXS. This session was video recorded for subsequent analysis of parental strategy use and youth language and communication. A different book was used by the parent each week so that he/she gained practice in the responsive strategies and the dyad practiced the shared storytelling process rather than simply memorizing how to tell a particular story. |
Efficacy assessment composite metrics computed from the three pre- and post-treatment language samples collected by the parent
| Youth total number of story-related utterances | The total number of child utterances directly related to the semantic or conceptual content of the story. Repetitions and completely unintelligible utterances were not included. This metric provides an index of the total amount of child talk. |
| Youth number of different word roots (NDWR) | The NDWR in the first 50 story-related utterances or in the child’s total number of story-related utterances if the child produced less than 50 story-related utterances. This metric provides an index of child vocabulary size. |
| Parent total number of story-related utterances | The total number of story-related parent utterances. This metric includes parent’s use of the specific strategies taught in the intervention (i.e., recasts, WH-questions, and fill-in-the-blank prompts) and provides an index of the total amount of parent talk. |
Characterization of adverse events experienced by youth with FXS
| Total number of participants1 | |||||
| Treatment group | No AE | Mild event | Moderate event | Serious event | Between-group comparison |
| Lovastatin | 1 | 10 | 1 | 0 | 0.3734 |
| Placebo | 3 | 9 | 4 | 0 | |
| Total number of adverse events2 | |||||
| Treatment Group | Mild event | Moderate event | Serious event | Between-group comparison | |
| Lovastatin | 31 | 1 | 0 | 0.2488 | |
| Placebo | 38 | 7 | 0 | ||
| Total number of adverse events: relationship3 | |||||
| Treatment group | Not related | Unlikely | Probably related | Between-group comparison | |
| Lovastatin | 10 | 12 | 10 | 0.8172 | |
| Placebo | 14 | 21 | 20 | ||
1Number of participants experiencing a certain severity of an adverse event where each participant is counted only once at the highest level of severity for the event
2Total number of adverse events experiencing a certain severity of an adverse event, including recurrence of same adverse event
3Total number of adverse events determined to be related to study drug (lovastatin), including recurrence of same adverse event
Fig. 2Means (with standard deviation error bars) for the primary outcome measures as a function of the treatment group. Note that all comparisons are significant (p < .05) after controlling for pre-treatment values
Group comparison (mean ± SD) in secondary outcome measures between patients on lovastatin vs. placebo
| Outcome | Lovastatin+PILI | Placebo+PILI | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | Post | Baseline | Post | |
| Receptive vocab growth score | 134.75 ± 31.76 | 136.92 ± 33.87 | 137.44 ± 22.71 | 136.44 ± 19.79 |
| Expressive vocab growth score | 143.5 ± 22.12 | 142.67 ± 24.53 | 141.44 ± 14.45 | 142.75 ± 12.91 |
| Expressive grammar raw score | 10.18 ± 11.36 | 11 ± 12.66 | 8.33 ± 6.41 | 9.93 ± 7.59 |
| Receptive grammar raw score | 22.18 ± 18.91 | 22.17 ± 20.23 | 21.4 ± 9.26 | 20.2 ± 11.98 |
| Parent strategy: recasts | 3.28 ± 2.67 | 29.67 ± 13.34 | 5.48 ± 5.07 | 24.79 ± 12.57 |
| Parent strategy: WH-questions | 9.56 ± 9.06 | 40.36 ± 20.69 | 13.19 ± 8.57 | 33.25 ± 17.73 |
| Parent strategy: fill-in-the-blank prompts | 2.06 ± 2.74 | 19.56 ± 11.96 | 3.21 ± 6.96 | 16.5 ± 14.24 |
| ABC-C – total score | 44.5 ± 28.43 | 40.5 ± 31.83 | 55.5 ± 30.18 | 44.06 ± 25.36 |
| RBS-R – total score | 27.75 ± 17.43 | 28.67 ± 23.9 | 32.19 ± 18.84 | 26.19 ± 20.14 |
| Clinical Global Impression (CGI) | 4.581 ± 0.67 | 2.422 ± 0.67 | 4.501 ± 0.63 | 2.382 ± 0.72 |
| VAS: spoken language impairment | 4.06 ± 2.43 | 5.66 ± 1.99 | 1.94 ± 1.41 | 4.18 ± 1.53 |
| VAS: social impairment | 3.73 ± 1.74 | 5.18 ± 1.70 | 2.55 ± 1.36 | 3.99 ± 2.06 |
1CGI-severity ratings collected at baseline visit
2CGI-improvement ratings collected at post-treatment visit
Correlations of parent sum strategies used with a given youth outcome
| Outcome | Lovastatin+PILI | Placebo+PILI | Between-group comparison | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Corr coeff. | Within-group ( | Corr coeff. | Within-group ( | ||
| Child total # of utterances | − 0.095 | 0.647 | |||
| Child # different words | − 0.194 | 0.704 | |||
| Clinical Global Impression (CGI) - Improvement | − 0.38 | 0.43 | |||
| VAS: spoken language impairment | 0.306 | 0.299 | |||
| VAS: social impairment | 0.356 | − 0.378 | |||
Group comparison for distributions of allele categories and % methylation for mosaic alleles between patients on lovastatin vs. placebo
| Variable | Lovastatin+PILI | Placebo+PILI | Between-group comparison |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fisher’s exact test Prob = 0.0211 (0.1717) | |||
| Full mutation | 9 (75%) | 7 (43.75%) | |
| Methylation mosaic | 0 | 4 (25%) | |
| Size mosaic | 3 (25%) | 5 (31.25%) | |
| 85.67 ± 9.29 | 75.22 ± 11.98 |
Group comparison (mean ± SD) in molecular biomarkers between patients on lovastatin vs. placebo
| Biomarker | Lovastatin+PILI | Placebo+PILI | Between-group comparison | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | Post | Within-group: baseline vs. post | Baseline | Post | Within-group: baseline vs. post | Baseline | Post | Post, adjusted for baseline | |
| MMP | 6.36 ± 2.84 | 6.25 ± 2.48 | 6.69 ± 3.65 | 7.20 ± 4.10 | |||||
| ERK | 0.48 ± 0.26 | 0.58 ± 0.32 | 0.50 ± 0.22 | 0.84 ± 0.98 | |||||
| S6K | 0.11 ± 0.10 | 0.11 ± 0.11 | 0.14 ± 0.26 | 0.08 ± 0.04 | |||||