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. 2016 Jun;9(6):632-42.
doi: 10.1002/aur.1572. Epub 2015 Oct 9.

School-age outcomes of infants at risk for autism spectrum disorder

Affiliations

School-age outcomes of infants at risk for autism spectrum disorder

Meghan Miller et al. Autism Res. 2016 Jun.

Abstract

Studies of infants at risk for autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have proliferated, but few of these samples have been followed longer-term. We conducted a follow-up study, at age 5.5-9 years, of younger siblings of children with ASD (high-risk group, n = 79) or typical development (low-risk group, n = 60), originally recruited as infants. Children with ASD were excluded because of the focus on understanding the range of non-ASD outcomes among high-risk siblings. Using examiner ratings, parent ratings, and standardized assessments, we evaluated differences in clinical outcomes, psychopathology symptoms, autism symptoms, language skills, and nonverbal cognitive abilities. After adjusting for covariates, the high-risk group had increased odds of any clinically elevated/impaired score across measures relative to the low-risk group (43% vs. 12%, respectively). The high-risk group also had increased odds of examiner-rated Clinical Concerns (CC) outcomes (e.g., ADHD concerns, broader autism phenotype, speech-language difficulties, anxiety/mood problems, learning problems) relative to the low-risk group (38% vs. 13%, respectively). The high-risk group with CC outcomes had higher parent-reported psychopathology and autism symptoms, and lower directly-assessed language skills, than the Low-Risk Typically Developing (TD) and High-Risk TD groups, which did not differ. There were no differences in nonverbal cognitive skills. For some in the high-risk group, clinical concerns persisted from early childhood, whereas for others clinical concerns were first evident at school-age. Results suggest continued vulnerability in at least a subgroup of school-age children with a family history of ASD and suggest that this population may benefit from continued screening and monitoring into the school-age years. Autism Res 2016, 9: 632-642. © 2015 International Society for Autism Research, Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Keywords: autism spectrum disorder; broader autism phenotype; psychopathology; school-age; siblings.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have no biomedical financial disclosures or potential conflicts of interest to report.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Correspondence between 36-month and school-age examiner-rated Clinical Concerns (CC) and Typically Developing (TD) outcome classifications for school-age participants with available 36-month outcome data. Any cases of ASD at 36 months were considered “CC” and classified as such (n = 3); all 3 were classified into the CC group (non-ASD) at school-age follow-up by examiners unaware of risk group or prior diagnoses.

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