| Literature DB >> 35109924 |
Han Yan1,2,3, Lauren Siegel4, Sara Breitbart1,4, Carolina Gorodetsky5, Alfonso Fasano5,6,7,8, Aliya Rahim4,9, Alvin Loh9,10, Abhaya V Kulkarni1,2,3, George M Ibrahim11,12,13,14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Children and youth with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) may manifest self-injurious behaviors (SIB) that may become severe and refractory with limited pharmacologic or behavioral treatment options. Here, we present the protocol of a prospective, mixed-methods study to assess the safety and efficacy of deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the nucleus accumbens (NAcc) for children and youth with ASD and severe, refractory SIB.Entities:
Keywords: Autism spectrum disorder; Children; Deep brain stimulation; Nucleus accumbens; Self-injurious behavior
Year: 2022 PMID: 35109924 PMCID: PMC8808966 DOI: 10.1186/s40814-022-00988-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pilot Feasibility Stud ISSN: 2055-5784
Literature review of DBS for the treatment of SIB and ASD
| [ | Age, sex | Behavior | DBS target (programming) | Pre-DBS score | Post-DBS score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sturm 2012 [ | 13M | Self-aggression | Basolateral amygdala (120 μs, 130 Hz, 2–6.5 V) | Restraints do not prevent skin lesions and life threatening self-injury | Restraint of the wrists suffices and is well tolerated |
| Stocco 2014 [ | 19F | Self-picking | Globus pallidus internus (120 μs, 80 Hz, 3.3 V) | JHMRS 46 | JHMRS 4 |
| Stocco 2014 [ | 17M | Punching of arms and legs, biting | Globus pallidus internus (120 μs, 100 Hz, 2.5 V) + Anterior limb of internal capsule (210 μs 100 Hz 2.0 V) | JHMRS 67 | JHMRS 19 |
| Benedetti-Isaac 2015 [ | 27M | Aggressive behavior towards self | Posterior hypothalamus (90 μs, 185 Hz, 2.7 V) | OAS 9 | OAS 1 |
| Benedetti-Isaac 2015 [ | 16M | Self-aggression | Posterior hypothalamus (90 μs, 185 Hz, 2.8 V) | OAS 8 | OAS 8 (temporary improvement at 1 month) |
| Segar 2015 [ | 24F | Biting hands, picking skin | Nucleus accumbens (90 μs, 130 Hz, 8 V) | GAF 20 | GAF 50-60 |
| Park 2016 [ | 13M | Self-mutilation, face-hitting causing fractures | Nucleus accumbens (90 μs, 130 Hz, 3–5 V) | CGI-S 6 ABC 106 CY-BOCS 22 K-ARS 54 SRS 101 | CGI-S 4 ABC 40 CY-BOCS 7 K-ARS 36 SRS 98 |
| Kakko 2019 [ | 19M | Aggression, self-mutilation, lacerations | Globus pallidus internus | Self-destructive behavior ceased | |
| Doshi 2019 [ | 42F | Hitting, violent outbursts | Nucleus accumbens (60 μs, 130 Hz, 2.6 V) | YBOCS 19 HDS 20 HAS 30 SCQ 26 | YBOCS 5 HDS 15 HAS 18 SCQ 16 |
ABC antecedent behavior consequence, CGI-S Clinical Global Impairment-Severity, CY-BOCS Children’s Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale, DBS deep brain stimulation, GAF global assessment of functioning, HAS Hamilton Anxiety Scale, HDS Hamilton Depression Scale, JHMRS John’s Hopkins motor stereotypy rating scale, K-ARS Korean ADHD Rating Scale, OAS Overt Aggression Scale, SCQ Social Communication Questionnaire, SRS Social Responsiveness Scale
Study inclusion and exclusion criteria
| 1. Children and adolescents between age 7-18 | |
| 2. Diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder by a treating developmental pediatrician | |
| 3. Failure or non-eligibility of medical therapy with ongoing repetitive self-injurious behaviors, at 6 months or more after instigation of therapy. Failure is defined as a lack of improvement in self-injurious behaviors, as documented by objective evidence, including caregiver logs or clinician assessment, if the clinician has documented a baseline status prior to instigation of the medical therapy. | |
| 4. The child has undergone rigorous, gold-standard Functional Behavior Assessment including functional analysis, leading to treatment lasting a minimum of 6 months, without significant change from baseline. | |
| 5. Diagnosis of secondary stereotypies, based on clinical assessment of the treating physicians with evidence of self-injury, documented in the patient records. The definition of self-injury is contextual, but requires current, previous or potential manifestation of physical injury to the child. | |
| 6. The child is at risk of permanent injury as a result of self-injurious behaviors. Permanent injury is non-reversible physical injury causing a reduction in baseline functions. | |
| 7. Parents or legal guardians, including caregivers, informed, and able to give written consent. | |
| 8. Able to comply with all testing, follow-ups and study appointments and protocols for 12 months following the end of the duration of the study. | |
| 1. Does not meet study specific definition of autism spectrum disorder using DSM-5 criteria. The treating physicians at each individual clinic will be responsible for diagnosis. | |
| 2. Substance dependence or abuse in the last 6 months, excluding caffeine and nicotine | |
| 3. Any contraindication to MRI, required for stereotactic surgical planning. | |
| 4. Likely to relocate away from the study site or move during the study’s 1-year duration | |
| 5. Presence of cardiac arrhythmias, coagulopathy or other cardiac, respiratory, renal, or endocrine conditions that will result in significant risk from a surgical procedure. | |
| 6. Pregnancy |
Fig. 1DBS for children, targeting the NAcc. A DBS extension wires for children are placed with greater length to allow for growth. B Coronal representation of DBS lead trajectory, passing through the ALIC and targeting the NAcc. C 3D representation of DBS lead trajectory. NAcc (purple), ALIC (yellow), caudate (dark blue), putamen (light blue), and globus pallidus (green)
Follow-up schedule for trial participan ts
| Study period | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Enrollment | Surgery | Follow-up | Post-trial | ||||||
| Timepoint | Week 8 | Baseline | Weekly (W1–6) | Every 4 W | Week 12 ± 1 week | Week 26 | Week 52 | W > 52 | |
| Enrollment | Eligibility screen | X | |||||||
| Informed consent for trial | X | ||||||||
| Demographics questionnaire | X | ||||||||
| Anesthetic evaluation | |||||||||
| Informed surgical consent | |||||||||
| In-hospital treatment and care | Deep brain stimulation leads and IPG insertion | ||||||||
| Programming | |||||||||
| Imaging | MRI | ||||||||
| CT | |||||||||
| FDG-PET (optional) | X | X | |||||||
| Questionnaires | Children’s Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale in ASD (CYBOCS-ASD) | X | X (week 4) | X | X | X | |||
| Inventory of Statements about Self-Injury (ISAS) | X | X (week 4) | X | X | X | ||||
| Behavior problems inventory (BPI) | X | X (week 4) | X | X | X | ||||
| Repetitive Behavior Scale-Revised (RBS-R) | X | X (week 4) | X | X | X | ||||
| Quality of Life Scale 9Peds QL | X | X (week 4) | X | X | X | ||||
| Aberrant Behavior Checklist | X | X (week 4) | X | X | X | ||||
| Other assessments | Neurosurgery evaluation | X (virtual) | X (virtual) | ||||||
| Neuropsychology evaluation | X | X | As needed | ||||||
| Actigraphy (optional) | X | X | X | ||||||
| Self-injury log | X | X | X | X | X | X | |||
Bolded cells show standard of care for all pediatric DBS patients