Title: Autism Spectrum Disorders
1Autism Spectrum Disorders
- Robin K. Rumsey, Ph.D., L.P.
- November 8, 2007
2Topics Reviewed
- Diagnosis and Early Identification
- Epidemiology/ Hypothesized Causes
- Treatment and Intervention
- Other Considerations
3Diagnosis
- Qualitative impairments in
- SOCIAL INTERACTION
- Communication
- Restricted, repetitive and stereotyped patterns
of behavior, interests or activities
4Diagnosis
- Qualifiers
- Onset in at least 1 domain before age 3
- Not better accounted for by other diagnosis
5Diagnosis
- Autistic Disorder
- Aspergers Disorder
- Pervasive Developmental Disorder Not Otherwise
Specified (PDD NOS)
6Diagnosis and Definition
- Diagnosis in young children
- Autism can be reliably diagnosed as young as 2
years - More variability with children with early
diagnoses of PDD, NOS - Repetitive behaviors are less common in both very
young children and high-functioning adolescents
and adults
7Diagnosis
- Medical Diagnosis versus Educational
Identification
8CHATChecklist for Autism in Toddlers18-month
visit
- 9 Parent Questions/5 physician Observations
- 5 Key Items
- Parent Enjoy playing peek-a-boo? - joint
attention - Parent Use his/her index finger to point, to
ASK for something?) protoimperative pointing - Physician Oh look (point), theres a (toy). -
following a point - Physician Can you pour a glass of water?
pretending - Physician Wheres the light? - producing a
point -
9Can Autism be reliably diagnosed lt36 months?
- Problems measurable by 18 mo and stable through
preschool age center around development of joint
attention and communication - Intense social interest in faces - 4 mo
- orienting to name - 12 mo
- Protoimperative pointing - 12-14 mo
- Protodeclarative pointing - 14-16 mo
- Atypical or no language development
- Joint attention is substrate of cognition
necessary for language development
10Average age at diagnosis 5 years
Most parents feel something is wrong by 18 months
- Seek medical assistance by 2 y.o.
lt 10 diagnosed at initial presentation
10 told to return if problems persist
Remainder referred to another professional at
mean of 40 months
25 referred to 3rd or 4th professional
40 diagnosed with ASD
25 told not to worry
30 No help was offered
10 professional explained the problem
11Early Developmental Trajectories in Typical
Development
12Children with autism
- Dont have the basic presupposition that they are
like other people and others are like them - Trouble imitating facial expressions
- Dont point or follow objects
- Dont understand false beliefs
13Imitation
14Fit Faces with EmotionsSocial Cognition
15Social engagement
16Theory of MindSallie-Ann false belief paradigm
17Joint Attention
18Early IdentificationWhy?
- Self-imposed social deprivation compromises
behavioral and brain development - Outcome evidence supports early intervention
- Early identification ? intense structured social
input ? More typical development
19Early Identification
20Assessment for ASD
- Should include direct assessment of cognitive
skills/ development, language, adaptive
functioning, and behavior whenever possible. - Diagnosis should be based on parent interview,
direct observation (Autism Diagnostic Observation
Schedule) and, if possible, teacher observations.
21Hypothesized Causes/ Epidemiology
22Risk Factors
- Males
- Monozygotic twins
- 60 for DSM-IV autistic disorder
- 71 for ASD phenotype
- 92 broader phenotype of social and
communication deficits - Siblings 3-20 (50-100x)
- Increasing maternal age
- Intrauterine infections
- rubella, CMV, herpes, HIV - probably additive
brain trauma rather than distinct ASD etiology - Neurotoxin exposure during pregnancy including
ETOH (FAS/ARND)
23Risk Factors / Family HistoryGenetic loading or
genetic etiologiesDimensional Disorder
- Within families broader autistic phenotype
- More social difficulties
- Higher cognitive, and executive function deficits
- Increased stereotypic behavior
- Language and pragmatic disorders
- Social problems
- Anxiety and OCD
- Affect disorders
- Schizophrenia, anxiety, bipolar disorder
- LD
- Cognitive Adaptive Disorder
24Autism comorbidity
- 50-75 with Cognitive Adaptive Disorders
- IQ best predicator of outcome
- 5-10 with Rare disorders
- 10-30 with Epilepsy
- ? with ADHD and other DSM diagnoses
25Syndromic Autism
26Causes of /Associations withSyndromic Autism
Modified from
Ozonoff et al 2003
- Chromosomal syndromes
- Fragile X, Angelman syndrome, 15q duplications,
Down Syndrome, del22q11, Ring 20, Rett disorder - Syndromes/associations without known chromosome
anomalies - Sotos, Smith-Lemli-Opitz, Moebius, CHARGE
association, Joubert, Congenital Myotonic
Dystrophy - Neurocutaneous syndromes
- Tuberous sclerosis
- Congenital and acquired infections
- Rubella
- cytomegalovirus
- In utero drug exposure
- Thalidomide, valproic acid
- Inherited metabolic disorders
- PKU
- Disorders of purine metabolism
- Miscellaneous, including hypoxic-ischemic
encephalopathy
27Epidemiology
- Increase in prevalence
- 1966-1991 4.4 cases per 10,000
- 1992-2001 12.7 cases per 10,000
- Factors that complicate interpretation
- changes in diagnostic practice
- Increased awareness of the disorder
- earlier diagnosis
- educational diagnoses
28Epidemiology
- Immunizations
- What are the concerns regarding Thimerosal
exposure?
29Epidemiology
30Epidemiology
- Theoretical and laboratory plausibility
- Suggested similarities between Hg toxicity and
autism - In-vitro biochemical effects of Hg
- Studies in different strains of mice
31Vaccine Theory
- Onset of autism
- Early onset with progression
- 30 have history o regression 12-24 months No
established definition MMR recommendation 12-15
months - 1998 Wakefield (Lancet, 1998) small
circumstantial case series of MMR association
with GI symptoms, autistic regression article
later retracted by Lancet - California Dept of Developmental services 273
increase in autism 1987-1998 - Well after 1971 introduction of MMR
- Study also confirms also not 2o change in DSM
criteria
32Thimerosal Theories
- Thimerosal (ethylmercury) used since 1930s in
vaccine - Prior to 2001 vaccines exposed children to gtEPA
recommended ethylmercury limits - Since 3/01 all vaccines available thimerosal free
- Prenatal exposure to methylmercury associated
with neurodevelopmental abnormalities - Similarities but differences between signs of
mercury poisoning and autism - Rapid excretion and low blood levels of
ethylmercury - NIH and CDC studies showed no relationship with
thimerosal
33Epidemiology
- EPA exposure guidelines are for methylmercury
- Low dose exposure primarily from fish or whale
consumption - Thimerosal contains ethylmercury
- Few studies of exposure in humans
- Applicability of methylmercury guidelines to
ethylmercury exposure? - Recent pharmacokinetic studies suggest that
ethylmercury has a much shorter half-life than
methylmercury
34Epidemiology
Incidence per 10,000 persons
Removal of thimerosal-containing vaccines in 1992
in Denmark
35IOM Report
- 2004 IOM
- Evidence favors rejection of causal
relationship - Consistent body of epidemiologic evidence shows
no association - Original Wakefield case series uninformative
regarding causality - Biologic models linking MMR and ASD are
fragmentary - No relevant animal models linking MMR and ASD
36IOM Report
- conclusion does not exclude possibility that
MMR could contribute to ASD in a small number of
children, because epidemiologic evidence lacks
the precision to say this
37Is there an epidemic?
- More cases than in the past? YES
- Is the increase attributable to change in real
risk? - Cant rule out changes in diagnosis or that we
are diagnosing better - Cant rule in increases in real risk because
etiology and all the risk factors are not known
38Genetic Influences in Autism
- Epidemiological, twin and family data together
suggest that the vast majority of cases of ASD
arise on the basis of a complex genetic
predisposition
39Treatment and Intervention
40Treatment and Intervention
- Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) Therapy
- Most commonly studied treatment
- What is it?
- Uses principles of reinforcement
- Variety of behavioral approaches (e.g., Discrete
trial, pivotal response training, verbal
behavior, incidental teaching) to teach social
interaction skills/ communication. - 25-40 hours a week
- In-home versus center-based
- Prerequisites for benefit (imitation, joint
attention) and when see most benefit
41Treatment and Intervention
- First randomized control trial of ABA published
in 2000 (Smith, Groen, Wynn) - Children who received ABA made greater gains than
children in parent training control group - None changed diagnosis
- Gains not dramatic
- Children with PDD, NOS and higher IQs made
greater gains
42Treatment and Intervention
- Other studies of ABA
- Age at start of treatment may be a factor, but
response to treatment is not limited to very
young preschool children - Comparing newer ABA studies to Lovaas studies
- fewer hours, therapists with less training,
different IQs.
43Educational Interventions
- Direct social skills instruction with
opportunities to practice skills with typically
developing peers (WITH SUPPORT) - Social communication skills
- Play skills
- Affect training
- Social stories
- Peer tutoring
- Should try and choose outcomes that are
MEASURABLE in order to monitor progress
44Educational Interventions
- Predictability
- Use of visuals to supplement communication as
needed - Functional Behavioral Assessment
45Additional therapies
- Speech/ Language therapy
- Should have experience working with children with
ASD. - Behavioral approach (e.g., verbal behavior) often
most effective. - Social communication
46Additional Therapies
- Occupational therapy
- Sensory Integration not supported by research,
but some anecdotal evidence - Motor coordination
47Relationship Development Intervention (RDI)
- Sounds promising, but not yet supported by
independent research.
48Supplements/ Diet
- Some anecdotal evidence, but not supported by
research. - For families who want to try this, we try to help
them approach dietary changes/ supplements in a
scientific way.
49Treatment and Intervention
- No single approach is best for all individuals or
even across time for the same individual with ASD
50Treatment and Intervention
- Greater recognition of the interplay between
different treatments - social stories
- written cues
- modifications of expansions of behavioral
treatments - incidental teaching
- Pivotal Response Intervention
- TEACCH
51Treatment and Intervention
- Studies on factors leading to successful
treatment - childs engagement in tasks
- generalization has to be specifically addressed
52Treatment and Intervention
- Communication interventions
- parent behavior
- Social skills
- limitations of full inclusion without systematic
or skills support - combined approaches (social stories, problem
solving, affect training, multi-site support)
53Treatment and Intervention
- Social skills
- Videotapes to help with complex play themes,
transitions, and play with siblings - Attempts to teach theory of mind improved
childrens ability to do tasks within teaching
environment, but did not generalize.
54Treatment and Intervention
- Pharmacological Treatments
- Over past decade, shift from antipsychotic
medications to the newer, atypical,
antipsychotics as well as to the use of the
serotonin-blocking agents
55Treatment and Intervention
- Pharmacological treatments
- Atypical antipsychotics have more favorable
side-effect profiles - Target symptoms
- self-injury, severe agitation or stereotyped
movements, severe behavior problems - Decreased risk of extra pyramidal side effects
56Treatment and Intervention
- Most extensive body of work has development on
risperidone - significant benefits
- SSRIs
- May be helpful with repetitive/ obsessive
behaviors, difficulties dealing with change - Not as well studied
- Some support for fluoxetine (reduced levels of
compulsive behaviors and aggression)
57Treatment and Intervention
- Stimulant medications
- Some suggestion that higher functioning children
may be more likely to respond positively
58Other Considerations
- Insurance
- PCA services
- Waiver
59Other Considerations
- Community resources
- Support groups
- Workshops
- Books
60Community Resources
- Support Groups/ Resources/ Education
- Autism Society of Minnesota (www.ausm.org)
- Autism Speaks (www.autismspeaks.org)
- Multidisciplinary Team Diagnosis
- University of Minnesota Autism Spectrum Disorders
Program (612-625-3617) - Alexander Center (952-993-2498)
- Mayo Clinic (507-538-3270)
61Community Resources
- Providers of in-home ABA Therapy (Twin Cities
Area) - Minnesota Early Autism Project (763-493-7935)
- Behavioral Dimensions (www.behavioraldimensions.co
m) - Lovaas Institute (612-925-8365)
- Minnesota Autism Center (www.mnautism.org) also
branches in St. Cloud, Rochester and Duluth
62Other Considerations
- Providers of Center-based ABA Therapy (Twin
Cities Area) - Holland Center
- Partners In Excellence
- Lazarus Project
63- Robin Rumsey, Ph.D., L.P.
- rumse002_at_umn.edu