| Literature DB >> 34689816 |
Petrus J de Vries1, Loren Leclezio2, Sugnet Gardner-Lubbe3, Darcy Krueger4, Mustafa Sahin5, Steven Sparagana6, Liesbeth De Waele7, Anna Jansen8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tuberous Sclerosis Complex (TSC), a multi-system genetic disorder, is associated with a wide range of TSC-Associated Neuropsychiatric Disorders (TAND). Individuals have apparently unique TAND profiles, challenging diagnosis, psycho-education, and intervention planning. We proposed that identification of natural TAND clusters could lead to personalized identification and treatment of TAND. Two small-scale studies showed cluster and factor analysis could identify clinically meaningful natural TAND clusters. Here we set out to identify definitive natural TAND clusters in a large, international dataset.Entities:
Keywords: Autism spectrum disorder; Cluster analysis; Factor analysis; Natural TAND clusters; Neuropsychiatric; Precision medicine; TAND; Tuberous Sclerosis Complex
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34689816 PMCID: PMC8543869 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-021-02076-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Fig. 1Schematic overview of data analysis in the study
Fig. 2Cluster analysis findings of the study (n = 453). The figure shows the dendrogram illustrating the 7 natural TAND clusters generated with Ward’s cluster analysis method
Fig. 3.1000-Fold Bootstrapping applied to WARD’s cluster analysis. Results are expressed as the proportion of time that two individual items cluster together
Fig. 4Factor analysis findings of the study (n = 453). The figure shows the seven-factor solution generated by exploratory factor analysis (EFA). PA = principal axis
Fig. 5Relationship between natural TAND Clusters and Factor Analysis. Results show two highly distinct clusters (Scholastic and Overactive/Impulsive), three fairly distinct clusters (Mood/Anxiety, Neuropsychological, Eat/Sleep), and two clusters showing more significant cross-loading (ASD-like and Dysregulated behaviour)
Seven natural TAND clusters identified in this study
| Natural TAND cluster | No. of items | TAND checklist items | Internal consistency (alpha) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scholastic | 4 | Reading Writing Spelling Mathematics | 0.97a |
| Neuropsychological | 7 | Memory Disorientation Attention difficulties (behaviour) Neuropsychological attention deficits Visuo-spatial Dual-tasking Executive skills | 0.87a |
| Autism Spectrum Disorder-Like | 6 | Inflexible Unusual language Repetitive behaviour Poor eye contact Peer difficulties Delayed language | 0.79a |
| Dysregulated behaviour | 3 | Aggressive outbursts Temper tantrums Self-injury | 0.73a |
| Overactive/Impulsive | 3 | Overactive Impulsive Restless | 0.70a |
| Mood/Anxiety | 4 | Mood swings Anxiety Depressed mood Extreme shyness | 0.69 |
| Eat/Sleep | 2 | Eating difficulties Sleep difficulties | 0.48 |
The table shows the clusters with items contained and internal consistency of each cluster
aCronbach alpha ≥ 0.7 indicates good internal consistency