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ImPACT Intervention for Children With ASD

Primary Purpose

Autism Spectrum Disorder

Status
Completed
Phase
Not Applicable
Locations
Belgium
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
ImPACT
TAU
Sponsored by
University Ghent
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional treatment trial for Autism Spectrum Disorder

Eligibility Criteria

18 Months - 48 Months (Child)All SexesDoes not accept healthy volunteers

Inclusion Criteria:

  • A clinical or working diagnosis of ASD

Exclusion Criteria:

-

Sites / Locations

  • Ghent University

Arms of the Study

Arm 1

Arm 2

Arm Type

Experimental

Active Comparator

Arm Label

ImPACT

TAU

Arm Description

Project ImPACT will be provided in 18 weekly intervention sessions, during which parents will learn how to stimulate their children's social imitation, social engagement, language and play skills. First, parents are taught techniques that promote interaction with the child (one technique per session, through demonstration and coaching). In the second half of the intervention, parents are taught direct teaching techniques, e.g., to promote language or play, again by means of demonstration and coaching. After completion of the program, families will receive guidance every 2-3 weeks for an additional 12 weeks, during which the support will generally not focus on social-communicative abilities, although ImPACT follow-up sessions might be given if necessary.

Treatment as usual (TAU) will be provided at the typical frequency, which is every 2-3 weeks. TAU can include targeting eating and sleeping problems, adaptive skills, or other goals. TAU will not include forms of intervention explicitly targeting social communicative skills. However, limited guidance on social communication development can be given if explicitly asked by parents.

Outcomes

Primary Outcome Measures

Change from baseline in the score of the Early Social Communication Scales (ESCS)
Structured observation of interaction with experimenter assessing joint attention. The measure includes continuous measurement of initiation of joint attention (IJA) and behavioural requests (IBR). The measurement of response to joint attention (RJA) is constrained by the numbered of joint attention bids offered by the administer, which is 14 in total. The IJA, IBR, and RJA subsections are considered separately, and the three scores are not combined. An increase in the IJA and RJA scores is interpreted as an improvement. A decrease in IBR, if combined with an increase of IJA, is generally also interpreted as a qualitative improvement of a child's social initiatives.
Change from baseline in the score of a semi-structured social imitation task
Unpublished task developed by B. Ingersoll, author of the ImPACT intervention programme. Semi-structured observation of interaction with experimenter. Only the object scale is in use. The score ranges from 0 to 20, with higher scores corresponding to higher social imitation rates. Score increase is a positive outcome.
Change from baseline in the score of the Brief Observation of Social Communication Change (BOSCC)
Semi-structured observation of interaction with parent and experimenter to assess social communication. The test contains 9 items that are meant to capture the quality of a child's social interaction, for which the total scores ranges from 0 to 45, and 3 items describing restricted a repetitive behaviour, which is also part of the ASD symptomatology, the total score of which ranges from 0 to 15. Three additional items are coded to add information on symptoms that might be present although they are not specifically part of the ASD syndrome, and refer to activity level, disruptive behaviour, and anxious behaviours. The BOSCC total score consists in the sum of the total score obtained in the first twelve items (ASD specific symptoms), and ranges from 0 to 60, with the three extra items added separately to integrate information. In the total and subscale scores, higher scores correspond to more severe symptoms. A decrease in the total score is thus considered a positive outcome.
Change from baseline in electrophysiological event-related potentials in response to voice and non-voice sounds (N1, N2 and P3 effects), measured with EEG
EEG activity will be recorded while children watch silent movies and passively listen to voice and non-voice sounds (passive oddball paradigm).
Change from baseline in haemodynamic response function (oxyhaemoglobin and deoxyhaemoglobin concentration in the cerebral cortex) evoked by social attention cues, measured with NIRS (near infrared spectroscopy)
Oxy- and deoxyhaemoglobin concentration measured during a task in which an experimenter establishes social and non-social attention conditions while children watch fragments of age-appropriate cartoons.
Change from post-test in the score of the Early Social Communication Scales (ESCS)
Structured observation of interaction with experimenter assessing joint attention. The measure includes continuous measurement of initiation of joint attention (IJA) and behavioural requests (IBR). The measurement of response to joint attention (RJA) is constrained by the numbered of joint attention bids offered by the administer, which is 14 in total. The IJA, IBR, and RJA subsections are considered separately, and the three scores are not combined. Stability (after increase at outcome) or increase in the IJA and RJA scores is interpreted as an improvement. A decrease in IBR, if combined with an increase of IJA, is generally also interpreted as a qualitative improvement of a child's social initiatives.
Change from post-test in the score of a semi-structured social imitation task
Unpublished task developed by B. Ingersoll, author of the ImPACT intervention programme. Semi-structured observation of interaction with experimenter. Only the object scale is in use. The score ranges from 0 to 20, with higher scores corresponding to higher social imitation rates. Score stability (after increase at outcome) or increase is a positive outcome.
Change from post-test in the score of the Brief Observation of Social Communication Change (BOSCC).
Semi-structured observation of interaction with parent and experimenter to assess social communication. The test contains 9 items that are meant to capture the quality of a child's social interaction, for which the total scores ranges from 0 to 45, and 3 items describing restricted a repetitive behaviour, which is also part of the ASD symptomatology, the total score of which ranges from 0 to 15. Three additional items are coded to add information on symptoms that might be present although they are not specifically part of the ASD syndrome, and refer to activity level, disruptive behaviour, and anxious behaviours. The BOSCC total score consists in the sum of the total score obtained in the first twelve items (ASD specific symptoms), and ranges from 0 to 60, with the three extra items added separately to integrate information. In the total and subscale scores, higher scores correspond to more severe symptoms. Score stability (after decrease at outcome) or decrease is a positive outcome.
Change from post-test in electrophysiological event-related potentials in response to voice and non-voice sounds (N1, N2 and P3 effects), measured with EEG
EEG activity recorded while children watch silent movies and passively listen to voice and non-voice sounds (passive oddball paradigm).
Change from post-test in haemodynamic response function (oxyhaemoglobin and deoxyhaemoglobin concentration in the cerebral cortex) evoked by social attention cues, measured with NIRS (near infrared spectroscopy)
Oxy- and deoxyhaemoglobin concentration measured during a task in which an experimenter establishes social and non-social attention conditions while children watch fragments of age-appropriate cartoons.

Secondary Outcome Measures

Change from baseline in the score of the Autism Diagnostic Observational Scale - 2 (ADOS-2)
A standard measure internationally used to identify symptoms of autism. The total score ranges from 0 to 30, with a higher score corresponding to higher symptom severity. The total score results from the sum of two subscales: the Social Affect subscale (SA), with scores ranging from 0 to 22, and the Restricted and Repetitive Behavior one (RRB), with scores ranging from 0 to 8. The ADOS-2 total score is converted through an age-dependednt algorithm to a diagnostic ordinal scale ranging from 0 to 10 (with higher scores indicating higher symptom severity), based on which a diagnostic classification can be formulated (no ASD, ASD, autism). A reduction in the total score, as well as in a subscale score, is considered a positive outcome, particularly if this leads to a decrease in the conversion score and/or to a milder diagnostic classification.
Change from baseline in the score of the Mullen Scales of Early Learning (M-SEL)
An age-appropriate measure of cognitive development. It measures a child's IQ on a continuous scale from 49 to 130 points, with the average being 100 points. If the child's IQ is lower than 49 or higher than 130, a general indication of <49 or >130 is given. It also provides an indication of a child's mental age between 0 and 68 months. A growth in mental age over time is considered a neutral outcome. A high growth rate (= the change in months is higher than the number of months actually passed between baseline and follow-up) in a domain where a child initially showed a delay is considered a positive outcome.
Change from baseline in the score of the Vineland screener questionnaire (0-6 years).
Questionnaire to assess adaptive skills. The composite score is computed as the sum of subscale scores: communicative skills (0-38), social skills (0-38), everyday skills (0-16), motor skills (0-36). Raw scores can be converted to adaptive age. Score increase is a positive outcome.
Change from baseline in the score of the Dutch adaptation of the MacArthur Communicative Development Inventories (NCDI - short form)
Parent report of language development (questionnaire). The questionnaire consists of two subsection: a) number of comprehended words (out of 112), b) number of actively used words (out of 112). The two subscales are kept separate, and no composite score is computed. The section in use is the 2A section, which is meant for children between 16 and 30 months. Because a number of children in the study are older than 30 months, only the raw scores are taken into account. Score increase is considered a positive outcome.
Change from baseline in the score of the Nijmeegse Ouderlijke Stress Index
Questionnaire over Parenting stress index developed in Nijmegen. Scores range from 0 to 738, distributed over two main subscales: parent-related stress, maximum score 390, and child-related stress, maximum score 348. Each subscale is composed of subdomains. The parent-related stress is described by competence (0-78), role restriction (0-42), attachment (0-42), depression (0-72), health (0-36), social isolation (0-36), marital relationship (0-42). The child-related stress is described by adaptation (scores: 0-78), temperament (0-60), distractability (0-72), demandingness (0-60), positive reinforcement (0-48), acceptance (0-72). An algorithm converts the subscores and the total score to a descriptive classification of parental stress level (very low, low, below average, average, above average, high, very high). Special norms hold for clinical samples. Higher values correspond to higher parental stress. A score reduction is a positive outcome.
Change from post-test in the score of the Vineland screener questionnaire (0-6 years).
Questionnaire to assess adaptive skills. The composite score is computed as the sum of subscale scores: communicative skills (0-38), social skills (0-38), everyday skills (0-16), motor skills (0-36). Raw scores can be converted to adaptive age. Score stability (after increase) or increase is a positive outcome.
Change from post-test in the score of the Dutch adaptation of the MacArthur Communicative Development Inventories (NCDI - short form)
Parent report of language development (questionnaire). The questionnaire consists of two subsection: a) number of comprehended words (out of 112), b) number of actively used words (out of 112). The two subscales are kept separate, and no composite score is computed. The section in use is the 2A section, which is meant for children between 16 and 30 months. Because a number of children in the study are older than 30 months, only the raw scores are taken into account. Score stability (after increase at outcome) or increase is considered a positive outcome.
Change from post-test in the score of the Nijmeegse Ouderlijke Stress Index
Questionnaire over Parenting stress index developed in Nijmegen. Scores range from 0 to 738, distributed over two main subscales: parent-related stress, maximum score 390, and child-related stress, maximum score 348. Each subscale is composed of subdomains. The parent-related stress is described by competence (0-78), role restriction (0-42), attachment (0-42), depression (0-72), health (0-36), social isolation (0-36), marital relationship (0-42). The child-related stress is described by adaptation (scores: 0-78), temperament (0-60), distractability (0-72), demandingness (0-60), positive reinforcement (0-48), acceptance (0-72). An algorithm converts the subscores and the total score to a descriptive classification of parental stress level (very low, low, below average, average, above average, high, very high). Special norms hold for clinical samples. Higher values correspond to higher parental stress. A score reduction is a positive outcome.

Full Information

First Posted
October 2, 2017
Last Updated
November 8, 2022
Sponsor
University Ghent
Collaborators
European Union
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1. Study Identification

Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT03323918
Brief Title
ImPACT Intervention for Children With ASD
Official Title
Parent-implemented Intervention for Children With ASD: Effect on Social Communication and Brain Activation
Study Type
Interventional

2. Study Status

Record Verification Date
November 2022
Overall Recruitment Status
Completed
Study Start Date
November 2016 (Actual)
Primary Completion Date
November 28, 2021 (Actual)
Study Completion Date
November 28, 2021 (Actual)

3. Sponsor/Collaborators

Responsible Party, by Official Title
Sponsor
Name of the Sponsor
University Ghent
Collaborators
European Union

4. Oversight

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product
No
Data Monitoring Committee
No

5. Study Description

Brief Summary
This randomised-controlled trial will assess the effect of an early intervention on the social-communicative abilities and brain activity of preschoolers with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The children´s social-communicative abilities and the related brain activity will be evaluated at three time points: before the start of the intervention (pre-intervention), immediately after its conclusion (post-intervention) and several weeks after its conclusion (follow-up).
Detailed Description
Previous research has shown that parent-implemented interventions are effective in improving the social skills of children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The aim of the present project is to investigate the brain activity changes that are at the basis of the changes observed in the children's behaviour. More specifically, the investigators will assess the effect of Project ImPACT, a parent-implemented intervention, which teaches parents techniques to stimulate the social-communicative abilities of their children. The intervention is suitable for preschoolers with a diagnosis of ASD and consists of 18 sessions of maximum 2 hours each, one session per week, delivered by trained therapists of the home guidance services in Flanders. Children with a diagnosis of ASD (or children who are suspected of ASD) between 1,5 and 4 years old and their parents will participate in the study. They will be randomly assigned to the ImPACT intervention or treatment as usual. The investigators will assess the effect of the intervention on the children's social-communicative abilities, and on the neural and biological correlates of these abilities. The families will be invited to come to the Faculty of Psychology and Pedagogical Sciences at three time points: before the start of the intervention, immediately after the end of the intervention (which is expected to last 18 weeks) and 12 weeks after the end of the intervention.

6. Conditions and Keywords

Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Autism Spectrum Disorder

7. Study Design

Primary Purpose
Treatment
Study Phase
Not Applicable
Interventional Study Model
Parallel Assignment
Model Description
Group 1 will receive the intervention specifically targeting social-communicative abilities (Project ImPACT). Group 2 will receive a generic intervention, that will not focus on social-communicative skills.
Masking
InvestigatorOutcomes Assessor
Masking Description
The investigators who are involved in the testing sessions and data analysis are blind to group assignment. An investigator which is not directly involved in participant testing or data analysis takes care of the randomisation, and coordinates it with the home guidance centers that administer the intervention.
Allocation
Randomized
Enrollment
56 (Actual)

8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

Arm Title
ImPACT
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
Project ImPACT will be provided in 18 weekly intervention sessions, during which parents will learn how to stimulate their children's social imitation, social engagement, language and play skills. First, parents are taught techniques that promote interaction with the child (one technique per session, through demonstration and coaching). In the second half of the intervention, parents are taught direct teaching techniques, e.g., to promote language or play, again by means of demonstration and coaching. After completion of the program, families will receive guidance every 2-3 weeks for an additional 12 weeks, during which the support will generally not focus on social-communicative abilities, although ImPACT follow-up sessions might be given if necessary.
Arm Title
TAU
Arm Type
Active Comparator
Arm Description
Treatment as usual (TAU) will be provided at the typical frequency, which is every 2-3 weeks. TAU can include targeting eating and sleeping problems, adaptive skills, or other goals. TAU will not include forms of intervention explicitly targeting social communicative skills. However, limited guidance on social communication development can be given if explicitly asked by parents.
Intervention Type
Other
Intervention Name(s)
ImPACT
Intervention Description
Teaching parents to train social communicative skills as outlined in arm description.
Intervention Type
Other
Intervention Name(s)
TAU
Other Intervention Name(s)
Treatment as usual
Intervention Description
TAU can include targeting eating and sleeping problems, adaptive skills, or other goals.
Primary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Change from baseline in the score of the Early Social Communication Scales (ESCS)
Description
Structured observation of interaction with experimenter assessing joint attention. The measure includes continuous measurement of initiation of joint attention (IJA) and behavioural requests (IBR). The measurement of response to joint attention (RJA) is constrained by the numbered of joint attention bids offered by the administer, which is 14 in total. The IJA, IBR, and RJA subsections are considered separately, and the three scores are not combined. An increase in the IJA and RJA scores is interpreted as an improvement. A decrease in IBR, if combined with an increase of IJA, is generally also interpreted as a qualitative improvement of a child's social initiatives.
Time Frame
outcome at 18 weeks from start of intervention (post-test)
Title
Change from baseline in the score of a semi-structured social imitation task
Description
Unpublished task developed by B. Ingersoll, author of the ImPACT intervention programme. Semi-structured observation of interaction with experimenter. Only the object scale is in use. The score ranges from 0 to 20, with higher scores corresponding to higher social imitation rates. Score increase is a positive outcome.
Time Frame
outcome at 18 weeks from start of intervention (post-test)
Title
Change from baseline in the score of the Brief Observation of Social Communication Change (BOSCC)
Description
Semi-structured observation of interaction with parent and experimenter to assess social communication. The test contains 9 items that are meant to capture the quality of a child's social interaction, for which the total scores ranges from 0 to 45, and 3 items describing restricted a repetitive behaviour, which is also part of the ASD symptomatology, the total score of which ranges from 0 to 15. Three additional items are coded to add information on symptoms that might be present although they are not specifically part of the ASD syndrome, and refer to activity level, disruptive behaviour, and anxious behaviours. The BOSCC total score consists in the sum of the total score obtained in the first twelve items (ASD specific symptoms), and ranges from 0 to 60, with the three extra items added separately to integrate information. In the total and subscale scores, higher scores correspond to more severe symptoms. A decrease in the total score is thus considered a positive outcome.
Time Frame
outcome at 18 weeks from start of intervention (post-test)
Title
Change from baseline in electrophysiological event-related potentials in response to voice and non-voice sounds (N1, N2 and P3 effects), measured with EEG
Description
EEG activity will be recorded while children watch silent movies and passively listen to voice and non-voice sounds (passive oddball paradigm).
Time Frame
outcome at 18 weeks from start of intervention (post-test)
Title
Change from baseline in haemodynamic response function (oxyhaemoglobin and deoxyhaemoglobin concentration in the cerebral cortex) evoked by social attention cues, measured with NIRS (near infrared spectroscopy)
Description
Oxy- and deoxyhaemoglobin concentration measured during a task in which an experimenter establishes social and non-social attention conditions while children watch fragments of age-appropriate cartoons.
Time Frame
outcome at 18 weeks from start of intervention (post-test)
Title
Change from post-test in the score of the Early Social Communication Scales (ESCS)
Description
Structured observation of interaction with experimenter assessing joint attention. The measure includes continuous measurement of initiation of joint attention (IJA) and behavioural requests (IBR). The measurement of response to joint attention (RJA) is constrained by the numbered of joint attention bids offered by the administer, which is 14 in total. The IJA, IBR, and RJA subsections are considered separately, and the three scores are not combined. Stability (after increase at outcome) or increase in the IJA and RJA scores is interpreted as an improvement. A decrease in IBR, if combined with an increase of IJA, is generally also interpreted as a qualitative improvement of a child's social initiatives.
Time Frame
follow-up at 12 weeks from end of intervention
Title
Change from post-test in the score of a semi-structured social imitation task
Description
Unpublished task developed by B. Ingersoll, author of the ImPACT intervention programme. Semi-structured observation of interaction with experimenter. Only the object scale is in use. The score ranges from 0 to 20, with higher scores corresponding to higher social imitation rates. Score stability (after increase at outcome) or increase is a positive outcome.
Time Frame
follow-up at 12 weeks from end of intervention
Title
Change from post-test in the score of the Brief Observation of Social Communication Change (BOSCC).
Description
Semi-structured observation of interaction with parent and experimenter to assess social communication. The test contains 9 items that are meant to capture the quality of a child's social interaction, for which the total scores ranges from 0 to 45, and 3 items describing restricted a repetitive behaviour, which is also part of the ASD symptomatology, the total score of which ranges from 0 to 15. Three additional items are coded to add information on symptoms that might be present although they are not specifically part of the ASD syndrome, and refer to activity level, disruptive behaviour, and anxious behaviours. The BOSCC total score consists in the sum of the total score obtained in the first twelve items (ASD specific symptoms), and ranges from 0 to 60, with the three extra items added separately to integrate information. In the total and subscale scores, higher scores correspond to more severe symptoms. Score stability (after decrease at outcome) or decrease is a positive outcome.
Time Frame
follow-up at 12 weeks from end of intervention
Title
Change from post-test in electrophysiological event-related potentials in response to voice and non-voice sounds (N1, N2 and P3 effects), measured with EEG
Description
EEG activity recorded while children watch silent movies and passively listen to voice and non-voice sounds (passive oddball paradigm).
Time Frame
follow-up at 12 weeks from end of intervention
Title
Change from post-test in haemodynamic response function (oxyhaemoglobin and deoxyhaemoglobin concentration in the cerebral cortex) evoked by social attention cues, measured with NIRS (near infrared spectroscopy)
Description
Oxy- and deoxyhaemoglobin concentration measured during a task in which an experimenter establishes social and non-social attention conditions while children watch fragments of age-appropriate cartoons.
Time Frame
follow-up at 12 weeks from end of intervention
Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Change from baseline in the score of the Autism Diagnostic Observational Scale - 2 (ADOS-2)
Description
A standard measure internationally used to identify symptoms of autism. The total score ranges from 0 to 30, with a higher score corresponding to higher symptom severity. The total score results from the sum of two subscales: the Social Affect subscale (SA), with scores ranging from 0 to 22, and the Restricted and Repetitive Behavior one (RRB), with scores ranging from 0 to 8. The ADOS-2 total score is converted through an age-dependednt algorithm to a diagnostic ordinal scale ranging from 0 to 10 (with higher scores indicating higher symptom severity), based on which a diagnostic classification can be formulated (no ASD, ASD, autism). A reduction in the total score, as well as in a subscale score, is considered a positive outcome, particularly if this leads to a decrease in the conversion score and/or to a milder diagnostic classification.
Time Frame
follow-up at 30 weeks from beginning of intervention
Title
Change from baseline in the score of the Mullen Scales of Early Learning (M-SEL)
Description
An age-appropriate measure of cognitive development. It measures a child's IQ on a continuous scale from 49 to 130 points, with the average being 100 points. If the child's IQ is lower than 49 or higher than 130, a general indication of <49 or >130 is given. It also provides an indication of a child's mental age between 0 and 68 months. A growth in mental age over time is considered a neutral outcome. A high growth rate (= the change in months is higher than the number of months actually passed between baseline and follow-up) in a domain where a child initially showed a delay is considered a positive outcome.
Time Frame
follow-up at 30 weeks from beginning of intervention
Title
Change from baseline in the score of the Vineland screener questionnaire (0-6 years).
Description
Questionnaire to assess adaptive skills. The composite score is computed as the sum of subscale scores: communicative skills (0-38), social skills (0-38), everyday skills (0-16), motor skills (0-36). Raw scores can be converted to adaptive age. Score increase is a positive outcome.
Time Frame
outcome at 18 weeks from start of intervention (post-test)
Title
Change from baseline in the score of the Dutch adaptation of the MacArthur Communicative Development Inventories (NCDI - short form)
Description
Parent report of language development (questionnaire). The questionnaire consists of two subsection: a) number of comprehended words (out of 112), b) number of actively used words (out of 112). The two subscales are kept separate, and no composite score is computed. The section in use is the 2A section, which is meant for children between 16 and 30 months. Because a number of children in the study are older than 30 months, only the raw scores are taken into account. Score increase is considered a positive outcome.
Time Frame
outcome at 18 weeks from start of intervention (post-test)
Title
Change from baseline in the score of the Nijmeegse Ouderlijke Stress Index
Description
Questionnaire over Parenting stress index developed in Nijmegen. Scores range from 0 to 738, distributed over two main subscales: parent-related stress, maximum score 390, and child-related stress, maximum score 348. Each subscale is composed of subdomains. The parent-related stress is described by competence (0-78), role restriction (0-42), attachment (0-42), depression (0-72), health (0-36), social isolation (0-36), marital relationship (0-42). The child-related stress is described by adaptation (scores: 0-78), temperament (0-60), distractability (0-72), demandingness (0-60), positive reinforcement (0-48), acceptance (0-72). An algorithm converts the subscores and the total score to a descriptive classification of parental stress level (very low, low, below average, average, above average, high, very high). Special norms hold for clinical samples. Higher values correspond to higher parental stress. A score reduction is a positive outcome.
Time Frame
outcome at 18 weeks from start of intervention (post-test)
Title
Change from post-test in the score of the Vineland screener questionnaire (0-6 years).
Description
Questionnaire to assess adaptive skills. The composite score is computed as the sum of subscale scores: communicative skills (0-38), social skills (0-38), everyday skills (0-16), motor skills (0-36). Raw scores can be converted to adaptive age. Score stability (after increase) or increase is a positive outcome.
Time Frame
follow-up at 12 weeks from end of intervention
Title
Change from post-test in the score of the Dutch adaptation of the MacArthur Communicative Development Inventories (NCDI - short form)
Description
Parent report of language development (questionnaire). The questionnaire consists of two subsection: a) number of comprehended words (out of 112), b) number of actively used words (out of 112). The two subscales are kept separate, and no composite score is computed. The section in use is the 2A section, which is meant for children between 16 and 30 months. Because a number of children in the study are older than 30 months, only the raw scores are taken into account. Score stability (after increase at outcome) or increase is considered a positive outcome.
Time Frame
follow-up at 12 weeks from end of intervention
Title
Change from post-test in the score of the Nijmeegse Ouderlijke Stress Index
Description
Questionnaire over Parenting stress index developed in Nijmegen. Scores range from 0 to 738, distributed over two main subscales: parent-related stress, maximum score 390, and child-related stress, maximum score 348. Each subscale is composed of subdomains. The parent-related stress is described by competence (0-78), role restriction (0-42), attachment (0-42), depression (0-72), health (0-36), social isolation (0-36), marital relationship (0-42). The child-related stress is described by adaptation (scores: 0-78), temperament (0-60), distractability (0-72), demandingness (0-60), positive reinforcement (0-48), acceptance (0-72). An algorithm converts the subscores and the total score to a descriptive classification of parental stress level (very low, low, below average, average, above average, high, very high). Special norms hold for clinical samples. Higher values correspond to higher parental stress. A score reduction is a positive outcome.
Time Frame
follow-up at 12 weeks from end of intervention

10. Eligibility

Sex
All
Minimum Age & Unit of Time
18 Months
Maximum Age & Unit of Time
48 Months
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: A clinical or working diagnosis of ASD Exclusion Criteria: -
Overall Study Officials:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Herbert Roeyers, Prof. dr.
Organizational Affiliation
UGent
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
Facility Information:
Facility Name
Ghent University
City
Ghent
State/Province
Oost-Vlaanderen
ZIP/Postal Code
9000
Country
Belgium

12. IPD Sharing Statement

Plan to Share IPD
No

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ImPACT Intervention for Children With ASD

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