| Literature DB >> 34514874 |
Julie Cumin1,2, Sandra Pelaez1,3, Laurent Mottron1,2.
Abstract
LAY ABSTRACT: The diagnostic criteria for autism are relatively vague and can lead to both under- and over-diagnosis if applied as a checklist. The highest level of agreement that a person is autistic occurs when experienced clinicians are able to make use of their clinical judgment. However, it is not always clear what this judgment consists of. Given that particular issues exist when assessing for autism in adult women, we wanted to explore how expert clinicians address difficult diagnostic situations in this population. We interviewed 20 experienced psychologists and psychiatrists from seven countries and discussed how they conducted autism assessments in adult women. We then came up with a list of 35 statements that described participant views. Our participants completed an online survey where they rated their agreement with these statements and provided feedback on how the statements were worded and organized. We obtained a final list of 37 suggested clinical guidelines. Participants agreed that diagnostic tools and questionnaires had to be coupled with judgment and expertise. Participants felt that trauma and Borderline Personality Disorder could be difficult to differentiate from autism, and agreed on some ways to address this issue. Participants agreed that self-identification to the autism spectrum was frequent, and that it was important to provide alternative support when they did not ultimately diagnose autism.Entities:
Keywords: adult; autism; camouflaging; differential diagnosis; women
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34514874 PMCID: PMC9340131 DOI: 10.1177/13623613211042719
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autism ISSN: 1362-3613
Final Delphi statements.
| Category | Delphi statements |
|---|---|
| Factors of complex assessments | 1. Autistic women have learned certain social contingencies allowing them to appear more typical |
| 2. Autism is increasingly mediatized and information available online, which has increased rates of self-diagnosis prior to clinical assessment | |
| 3. Autism is regarded more positively than most psychiatric diagnoses, it is seen as a social identity which can give access to a community and provide a feeling of belonging | |
| 4. Women seeking autism assessment often have complex histories and multiple previous mental health diagnoses | |
| 5. Self-diagnosis of autism prior to assessment can sometimes complicate the assessment
| |
| 6. Disappointment, confusion, and/or anger can occur when a patient is not given a diagnosis of autism | |
| Managing complex assessments | 7. Standardized assessment tools are not equipped to detect autism in adult women of typical intelligence |
| 8. Self-report questionnaires can lack specificity and be biased by the patient’s knowledge about autism | |
| 9. Self-report questionnaires can provide material to explore in an interview, especially when questionnaires contradict each other or the clinician’s observations | |
| 10. Diagnostic assessments should ideally be long and run over more than one session, to observe functioning once patient gets tired, and assess several diagnostic hypotheses with relevant tools | |
| 11. During the assessment, the person should be challenged with spontaneous interaction to observe how they handle unfamiliar situations | |
| 12. The person’s difficulties should ideally be corroborated by an external informant who knew them in childhood | |
| 13. Asking for specific personal examples can help to confirm that difficulties are based on lived experience rather than patient’s research | |
| 14. It is useful to manage patient expectations by explaining early on that assessment may not result in diagnosis of autism | |
| 15. It is important to draft the final report in collaboration with the patient and share content transparently | |
| 16. In cases where autism is not diagnosed, it is important to validate the patient’s difficulties and offer other avenues for support or alternative diagnoses | |
| 17. The concept of “autistic traits” is useful to explain to patients why a diagnostic threshold of autism was not reached
| |
| Signs indicative of autism | 18. Differences can be noticed over time in the more nuanced aspects of social behavior beyond eye contact and prosody, such as topic maintenance, social inferences, and reciprocity |
| 19. Autistic deep interests are ego-syntonic, exhaustive, and cyclical | |
| 20. Autistic women often report investing large amounts of energy preparing for social interactions and feeling drained following the interaction | |
| 21. Autistic women have often not reached the level of professional/personal achievement expected given their apparent intelligence | |
| 22. Autistic women have often made numerous independent attempts to adapt and overcome their difficulties | |
| 23. Autistic women often demonstrate high emotional empathy toward others, but poor understanding/awareness of their own emotions | |
| 24. Autistic women are often able to recognize their own functioning in that of other autistic people | |
| 25. Autistic women are often able to apply their special interests and use them as social currency | |
| 26. Autistic women tend to have few or no true peer relationships and to be naïve in their relationships | |
| 27. In autistic women, the pursuit of diagnosis is rarely utilitarian but rather about self-knowledge | |
| 28. Compared to women who go on to receive other diagnoses, autistic women may require more prompting or guidance to fill out questionnaires and provide information during the assessment | |
| 29. In autistic women, gender may be expressed more fluidly, with less attachment to the gender binary, or femininity may appear forced/rehearsed | |
| Differential diagnosis and comorbidities | 30. A current acute mental health episode (e.g. depressive episode) can make it difficult to determine baseline functioning to diagnose autism |
| 31. For an experienced clinician, diagnosing autism relies on thorough, reliable assessment, coupled with a “feeling in the room” | |
| 32. The chronology of difficulties is extremely important when making differential diagnoses. | |
| 33. Most women presenting for an autism assessment have experienced trauma in some form | |
| 34. Borderline Personality Disorder is highly present in autism assessment clinics as a past diagnosis and/or a potential differential diagnosis | |
| 35. Autistic women can superficially present with signs resembling Borderline Personality Disorder | |
| 36. Borderline Personality Disorder can be differentiated from autism by exploring the person’s understanding of neurotypical social dynamics, and how they describe their emotions | |
| 37. Borderline Personality Disorder can be differentiated from autism by exploring whether attachment difficulties are present |