Deborah Fein
Deborah Fein
Deborah Fein
Autism?
The Help Group Summit,
Oct. 20, 2006
Deborah Fein, Ph.D.
Board of Trustees Distinguished Professor
of Psychology
University of Connecticut
1
Other Social Deficits in Autism
• Social behavior
– Initiations are less play-oriented
– Initiations are more adult-oriented
– Interactions are more need-oriented
– Less visual checking before gesturing
– Reduced social referencing
– Reduced orienting to other’s distress OR
orienting but little prosocial behavior
– Low sensitivity to nonverbal cues
2
Other PDD Diagnoses (cont’d)
• Childhood Disintegrative Disorder: rare,
normal behavior for at least 2 years followed by
serious regression
Outcome
• Rutter (1970):
– 1.5% of his group had achieved normal functioning.
– 35% showed fair or good adjustment, usually
required some degree of supervision, experienced
some difficulties with people, had no personal friends,
and showed minor oddities of behavior.
– more than 60% remained severely handicapped and
were living in hospitals for mentally retarded or
psychotic individuals or in other protective settings.
– Initial IQ scores appeared stable over time.
3
Lovaas, 1987
• 9/19 in the experimental group (40 hours a week ABA)
successfully completed normal first grade in a public
school and had an average or above score on IQ tests
(M=107, range=94-120), and gained an average of 30 IQ
points over Control Group subjects (10 hours/week).
4
• Szatmari et al, 2003 examined outcome for non-retarded
ASD children age 4-6. Outcome measured at 6-8 and
10-13.
– Measures of socialization, communication, and autistic
symptoms. No discussion of change in dx but some Vineland
Soc and Comm scores in the normal range
– Predictor variables worked better for soc and comm. than autistic
symptoms
– Comm. in Asperger’s in low normal range; other outcome
variables were below normal, and social declined over time.
– Language skills predicted better for autism than Asperger’s.
– Nonverbal skills predicted outcome in autistic symptoms for all
ASD and esp. Asperger’s.
5
Sallows and Graupner (2005):
48% of a group of 23 children receiving ABA
reach ‘best outcome’ status, scoring normally on
tests of IQ, language, adaptive functioning,
school placement, and personality, with mild
elevations on some personality and diagnostic
scales.
Three of them needed classroom aides for
attention problems, and one would probably still
meet criteria for ASD, but the remaining 7 or 8
children would probably meet our criteria for
optimal outcome (OO).
6
Outcome (summary)
• Many studies show IQ to be relatively stable
• IQ predicts social, communication, and adaptive
behavior
• Social and communication domains can evolve
separately from repetitive behaviors (Charman et
al,2005). Social and communication skills tend to get
better; repetitive behaviors tend to be stable
• Predictability is better from age 3 than age 2 (Charman
et al, 2005)
• “Followup studies indicate that the prognosis for the
majority of individuals with autism remains poor” (Howlin,
2003)
• Few controlled studies (except a few of ABA) report
‘recovery’, but all followup studies have a few children
functioning in the normal range on social measures, or
showing a change in diagnosis to a non-ASD syndrome
Theoretical Curves
50
40
autistic
30
skill
normal
20
recovered
10
0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
age
7
110
100
standard score
90
Autistic
80
Normal
70
Recovered
60
50
40
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
age
Is “Recovery” Possible?
General belief in the field is ‘no’
Many experts cited in the press as well as in
journal articles cautioning against hopes of
‘recovery’
Three Studies
8
Pervasive Developmental Disorder
Can Evolve into ADHD: Case
Illustrations
Deborah Fein, Ph.D.
Pamela Dixon, M.A.
Jennifer Paul, M.A.
Harriet Levin, OTR/L
Journal of Autism and Developmental
Disorders, in press
Case of ST
• Language lost around 15 months
• Met criteria for full autism at age 3
• Responded rapidly to intense ABA program
starting at age 3
• Age 5, starting to develop more social interest,
but still quite solitary; diagnosed PDD
• Age 7.5, quite social, academically and
cognitively normal, notable attention problems
• Age 13, socially normal, academically high
achieving, good motor skills, mild attention
problems
9
Interpretations of the autistic to ADHD
clinical picture
• Comorbid ASD/ADHD; autism resolves, leaving
the ADHD clinical picture
Update on M-CHAT
• Pediatric vs. high risk screens
– Total sample 80% pediatric, 20% high risk
– 1.6% peds sample failed, 28% high risk
– 0.6% peds sample eval’d, 22% high risk
– 0.2% peds sample PDD/aut, 16% high risk
sample PDD/aut
10
Reliability of diagnosis from age 2 to 4
for children detected by the Modified-
Checklist for Autism in Toddlers
(Kleinman, Sutera, Robins, Fein et al,
in prep)
autistic age 2 not autistic
age 2
autistic age 4 46 0
not autistic 15 16
age 4
Vineland Communication
100
90
80
asd to non asd
70 asd to asd
non asd to non asd
60
50
40
Vine.Comm.1 Vine.Comm.2
11
Vineland Socialization
100
90
80
asd to non asd
70 asd to asd
non asd to non asd
60
50
40
Vine.Soc.1 Vine.Soc.2
Vineland Motor
95
90
85
80
asd to non asd
75
asd to asd
70
non asd to non asd
65
60
55
50
VINEMOTOR1 VINEMOTOR2
Symptom Severity
40
35
30
25
ASD to ASD
20 Non ASD to Non ASD
ASD to Non ASD
15
10
0
CARS Time 1 CARS Time 2
12
DSM-Symptoms
8
7
6
5 ASD-to-NON
4 ASD-to-ASD
3 NON-to-NON
2
1
0
DSM Symptoms DSM Symptoms
Time 1 Time 2
Cognitive Ability
100
90
80
70 ASD to ASD
Non ASD to Non ASD
60 ASD to Non ASD
50
40
30
IQ Time 1 IQ Time 2
Receptive Language
45
40
35 ASD-to-NON
30 ASD-to-ASD
25 NON-to-NON
20
15
Mullen Rec. Mullen Rec.
Lang. Time 1 Lang. Time 2
13
Expressive Language
45
40
35 ASD-to-NON
30 ASD-to-ASD
25 NON-to-NON
20
15
Mullen Exp. Mullen Exp.
Lang. Time 1 Lang. Time 2
14
• So far, item analyses reveals no
differences between the children who stay
autistic and those who leave the spectrum,
except:
– the children who leave the spectum are more
interested in listening to stories, and
– are better at some specific motor skills, such
as running, and twisting door knobs and jar
lids.
1
mean HC z score
0.5
lost ASD dx
ASD group
0
birth to 2 weeks 1 to 2 months 3 to 5 months 6 to 9 months 10 to 14 months 15 to 25 months
-0.5
-1
age in months
0.8
0.6
mean weight z score
0.4
0.2
ASD group
lost ASD dx
0
birth to 2 1 to 2 3 to 5 6 to 9 10 to 14 15 to 25
-0.2 weeks months months months months months
-0.4
-0.6
-0.8
age
15
Mean height z scores by diagnosis at second
1.6
evaluation
1.4
1.2
1
mean height z score
0.8
ASD group
0.6
lost ASD dx
0.4
0.2
0
birth to 2 weeks 1 to 2 months 3 to 5 months 6 to 9 months 10 to 14 months 15 to 25 months
-0.2
-0.4
age in months
16
14 children with prior ASD diagnoses, age 5-
9, IQs in the normal range
placed in age-appropriate mainstream
classes
considered to be generally functioning at the
level of their typically developing peers
administered an extensive battery of
standardized and experimental language
tests
Results
• Normal performance:
– Comprehension of vocabulary, grammatical
morphemes, and sentences
– Expressive vocabulary and morphology
– Memory for sentences
– Adaptive skills (communication, socialization)
Results (cont’d)
• Impairment in:
– Mental state verbs (know, guess, estimate)
– Reasoning about animate objects
– Second order theory of mind
– Producing narratives (made fewer causal
attributions, discussed fewer major events,
were less likely to discuss characters’
motivations, and were more likely to
misunderstand the pictures)
17
• Followup of these children at age 9-12
indicates that they are closing the gap.
The only remaining deficit (p>.06) is in
mental state verbs
18
How Can Recovery Work: Two Key
Questions
• Are the children for whom ‘recovery’ is
possible the ones with minimal structural
abnormalities?
• When ‘recovered’ children do a task
normally, are they using the same brain
systems as children who were never
autistic?
19
Who are the children who make
limited progress despite good
intervention?
• mentally retarded
• dense language disorder
• intense need for repetitive behaviors
• Forced teaching of language and other skills forces more normal patterning of cortex
• Pairing social contact with primary reinforcers results in social contact developing
secondary reinforcing value (Dawson)
20