| Literature DB >> 33704613 |
Stelios Georgiades1, Peter A Tait2, Paul D McNicholas2, Eric Duku2, Lonnie Zwaigenbaum3, Isabel M Smith4, Teresa Bennett2, Mayada Elsabbagh5, Connor M Kerns6, Pat Mirenda6, Wendy J Ungar7, Tracy Vaillancourt8, Joanne Volden3, Charlotte Waddell9, Anat Zaidman-Zait10, Stephen Gentles2, Peter Szatmari11.
Abstract
This study examined the trajectories of autistic symptom severity in an inception cohort of 187 children with ASD assessed across four time points from diagnosis to age 10. Trajectory groups were derived using multivariate cluster analysis. A two trajectory/cluster solution was selected. Change in trajectory slopes revealed a turning point marked by plateauing in symptom reduction during the period of transition to school (age 6) for one of the two trajectories. Trajectories were labelled: Continuously Improving (27%) and Improving then Plateauing (73% of sample). Children in the two trajectories differed in levels of symptom severity, language, cognitive, and adaptive functioning skills. Study findings can inform the development of more personalized services for children with ASD transitioning into the school system.Entities:
Keywords: Autism spectrum disorder; Chronogeneity; Trajectories; Turning points
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33704613 PMCID: PMC8732828 DOI: 10.1007/s10803-021-04949-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autism Dev Disord ISSN: 0162-3257
ADOS Total severity score means (modelled) at each assessment point by trajectory group (cluster)
| Assessment (Mean child age) | Trajectory group 1 | Trajectory group 2 |
|---|---|---|
| 41 months | 7.72 | 8.00 |
| 56 months | 6.23 | 7.58 |
| 80 months | 5.95 | 7.45 |
| 129 months | 4.77 | 7.57 |
ADOS Autism diagnostic observation schedule
Descriptive statistics and comparisons for baseline (T1) measures used to characterize derived trajectory groups (clusters)
| Trajectory group 1 | Trajectory group 2 | Effect size, Cohen’s d | t-statistic, d.f., p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ADOS total severity score | 7.20 (1.61) | 7.99 (1.61) | −0.491 | −3.015, 185, 0.003 |
| ADOS social affect domain severity score | 7.47 (1.64) | 7.75 (1.76) | −0.162 | −0.985, 185, 0.326 |
| ADOS restricted repetitive behavior domain severity score | 6.90 (1.62) | 8.23 (1.53) | −0.854 | −5.187, 185, < 0.001 |
| Age at ADOS visit (months) | 42.07 (8.52) | 41.18 (9.64) | 0.095 | 0.580, 185, 0.563 |
| VABS II adaptive behavior composite score | 79.49 (10.61) | 72.93 (10.23) | 0.635 | 3.861, 184, < 0.001 |
| M-P-R developmental index age equivalent | 29.60 (13.89) | 23.75 (12.70) | 0.449 | 2.667, 178, 0.008 |
| PLS-4 total standard score | 79.55 (22.62) | 64.46 (18.49) | 0.768 | 4.105, 69.462, < 0.001 |
| n (%) | n (%) | Effect size, Cramer’s V | χ2-statistic, d.f., p-value | |
| Sex (male) | 44 (86.27%) | 116 (85.29%) | 0.012 | 1.000 (FET) |
| Site | 0.215 | 8.661, 4, 0.070 | ||
| Halifax | 15.69% | 7.35% | ||
| Montreal | 47.06% | 36.76% | ||
| Hamilton | 7.84%% | 16.91% | ||
| Vancouver | 15.69% | 28.68% | ||
| Edmonton | 13.73% | 10.29% | ||
| FBIQ socioeconomic status | ||||
| < $80,000 annual income | 55.32% | 61.72% | 0.058 | 0.488(FET) |
| < 13 years schooling | 41.67% | 44.62% | 0.026 | 0.737(FET) |
Entries are mean (standard deviation) for continuous measures and n (%) for categorical measures
Group 1 Continuously improving trajectory (27% of sample), Group 2 Improving then plateauing trajectory (73% of sample), ADOS Autism diagnostic observation schedule, VABS II Vineland adaptive behavior scales second edition, PLS-4 Preschool language scale–Fourth edition, M-P-R Merrill-Palmer–Revised scales of development, FBIQ Family background information questionnaire, FET 2-sided Fisher’s exact test
Fig. 1Mean trend (modelled) per trajectory group (cluster) for ADOS Total Calibrated Severity Scores over time. ADOS Autism diagnostic observation schedule, Group 1 Continuously improving trajectory (27% of sample), Group 2 Improving then plateauing trajectory (73% of sample)
Fig. 2Plot of the individual (child) raw ADOS Total calibrated severity metric scores and Locally Weighted Scatterplot Smoothing (LOESS)a line by trajectory (cluster) group over time. ADOS Autism diagnostic observation schedule, Group 1 Continuously improving trajectory (27% of sample), Group 2 Improving then plateauing trajectory (73% of sample). aLOESS (Locally Weighted Scatterplot Smoothing) is a tool used in regression analysis to creates a smooth line through a time plot or scatter plot to help depict the relationship between variables and foresee trends
Computed trajectory slopes for derived groups (clusters) of autistic symptom severity across assessment intervals
| Trajectory group | Assessment intervals | Slope |
|---|---|---|
| T1–T2 (41–56 months) | −0.559 | |
| T2–T3 (56–80 months) | −0.235 | |
| T3–T4 (80–129 months) | −0.304 | |
| T1–T2 (41–56 months) | −0.195 | |
| T2–T3 (56–80 months) | −0.147 | |
| T3–T4 (80–129 months) | 0.026 |
Fig. 3Smoothed trend by trajectory group (cluster) at age at visit of ADOS severity scores for individual children using Sparse Functional Principal Component Analysis (SFPCA) analysis. The top panel represents Continuously Improving trajectory group (27% of sample) and the bottom panel represents the Improving then Plateauing trajectory group (73% of sample)