Identifying autism symptom severity trajectories across childhood

Einat Waizbard-Bartov, Emilio Ferrer, Brianna Heath, Sally J. Rogers, Christine Wu Nordahl, Marjorie Solomon, David G. Amaral

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

24 Scopus citations

Abstract

An individual's autism symptom severity level can change across childhood. The prevalence and direction of change, however, are still not well understood. Nor are the characteristics of children that experience change. Symptom severity trajectories were evaluated from early to middle childhood (approximately ages 3–11) for 182 autistic children. Symptom severity change was evaluated using individual change scores and the Reliable Change Index. Fifty-one percent of participants experienced symptom severity change: 27% of children decreased in severity, 24% increased and 49% were stable. Symptom severity decreases were more common during early childhood. Severity increases occurred at both early and middle childhood but increase in social affect severity was especially prominent during middle childhood. Most children experienced significant change during only one period and remained stable during the other. Girls decreased more and increased less in symptom severity than boys. Children that increased in severity decreased in adaptive functioning across childhood. Exploratory analyses indicated that a decrease in severity was associated with higher parental education level and older parental age at the time of the child's birth. Conversely, increase in autism severity was associated with lower parental education level and younger parental age at the child's birth. These findings extend recent observations that symptom severity change is more likely than previously appreciated. An understanding of the role of both biological and sociodemographic factors in determining a child's symptom trajectory may factor into future decisions on allocation and type of interventions distributed to young autistic children. Lay Summary: We studied whether a child's autism severity changed from initial diagnosis until middle childhood (ages 3–11). We found that 27% of the children decreased in severity, 24% increased and the rest stayed the same. Symptom severity decreases were more common during early childhood while severity increases were more prominent during middle childhood. We also found that girls were more likely to decrease than boys. Whether a child decreased or increased is related, in part, to parental characteristics.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)687-701
Number of pages15
JournalAutism Research
Volume15
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2022
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 International Society for Autism Research and Wiley Periodicals LLC.

Funding

This research was supported by grant R01MH103371 from the NIH to Dr. Amaral. This project was also supported by the MIND Institute Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Center (U54HD079125). Einat Waizbard‐Bartov was supported by an Autism Speaks Predoctoral Fellowship grant (12841). Dr. Solomon was supported by NIH grants 1R01MH106518 and 2R01MH103284. Dr. Nordahl was supported by NIH grant R01MH104438. This research was supported by an Autism Center of Excellence grant awarded by the National Institute of Child Health and Development (NICHD) (P50 HD093079). The authors would like to thank the families and children who participated in the Autism Phenome Project and Girls with Autism Imaging of Neurodevelopment studies.

FundersFunder number
MIND Institute Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Center
National Institutes of Health2R01MH103284, U54HD079125, 1R01MH106518, R01MH104438, 12841
National Institute of Child Health and Human DevelopmentP50HD093079

    Keywords

    • ADOS
    • autism spectrum disorder
    • calibrated severity scores
    • longitudinal
    • severity change
    • sex differences

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