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4 岁儿童自闭症谱系障碍的流行率和特征——早期自闭症和发育障碍监测网络,美国七个地点,2010、2012 和 2014 年。

Prevalence and Characteristics of Autism Spectrum Disorder Among Children Aged 4 Years - Early Autism and Developmental Disabilities Monitoring Network, Seven Sites, United States, 2010, 2012, and 2014.

机构信息

Division of Congenital and Developmental Disorders, National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities, CDC.

University of Utah, Salt Lake City.

出版信息

MMWR Surveill Summ. 2019 Apr 12;68(2):1-19. doi: 10.15585/mmwr.ss6802a1.

Abstract

PROBLEM/CONDITION: Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is estimated to affect up to 3% of children in the United States. Public health surveillance for ASD among children aged 4 years provides information about trends in prevalence, characteristics of children with ASD, and progress made toward decreasing the age of identification of ASD so that evidence-based interventions can begin as early as possible.

PERIOD COVERED

2010, 2012, and 2014.

DESCRIPTION OF SYSTEM

The Early Autism and Developmental Disabilities Monitoring (Early ADDM) Network is an active surveillance system that provides biennial estimates of the prevalence and characteristics of ASD among children aged 4 years whose parents or guardians lived within designated sites. During surveillance years 2010, 2012, or 2014, data were collected in seven sites: Arizona, Colorado, Missouri, New Jersey, North Carolina, Utah, and Wisconsin. The Early ADDM Network is a subset of the broader ADDM Network (which included 13 total sites over the same period) that has been conducting ASD surveillance among children aged 8 years since 2000. Each Early ADDM site covers a smaller geographic area than the broader ADDM Network. Early ADDM ASD surveillance is conducted in two phases using the same methods and project staff members as the ADDM Network. The first phase consists of reviewing and abstracting data from children's records, including comprehensive evaluations performed by community professionals. Sources for these evaluations include general pediatric health clinics and specialized programs for children with developmental disabilities. In addition, special education records (for children aged ≥3 years) were reviewed for Arizona, Colorado, New Jersey, North Carolina, and Utah, and early intervention records (for children aged 0 to <3 years) were reviewed for New Jersey, North Carolina, Utah, and Wisconsin; in Wisconsin, early intervention records were reviewed for 2014 only. The second phase involves a review of the abstracted evaluations by trained clinicians using a standardized case definition and method. A child is considered to meet the surveillance case definition for ASD if one or more comprehensive evaluations of that child completed by a qualified professional describes behaviors consistent with the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th Edition, Text Revision (DSM-IV-TR) diagnostic criteria for any of the following conditions: autistic disorder, pervasive developmental disorder-not otherwise specified (PDD-NOS, including atypical autism), or Asperger disorder (2010, 2012, and 2014). For 2014 only, prevalence estimates based on surveillance case definitions according to DSM-IV-TR and the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5) were compared. This report provides estimates of overall ASD prevalence and prevalence by sex and race/ethnicity; characteristics of children aged 4 years with ASD, including age at first developmental evaluation, age at ASD diagnosis, and cognitive function; and trends in ASD prevalence and characteristics among Early ADDM sites with data for all 3 surveillance years (2010, 2012, and 2014), including comparisons with children aged 8 years living in the same geographic area. Analyses of time trends in ASD prevalence are restricted to the three sites that contributed data for all 3 surveillance years with consistent data sources (Arizona, Missouri, and New Jersey).

RESULTS

The overall ASD prevalence was 13.4 per 1,000 children aged 4 years in 2010, 15.3 in 2012, and 17.0 in 2014 for Early ADDM sites with data for the specific years. ASD prevalence was determined using a surveillance case definition based on DSM-IV-TR. Within each surveillance year, ASD prevalence among children aged 4 years varied across surveillance sites and was lowest each year for Missouri (8.5, 8.1, and 9.6 per 1,000, for 2010, 2012, and 2014, respectively) and highest each year for New Jersey (19.7, 22.1, and 28.4 per 1,000, for the same years, respectively). Aggregated prevalence estimates were higher for sites that reviewed education and health care records than for sites that reviewed only health care records. Among all participating sites and years, ASD prevalence among children aged 4 years was consistently higher among boys than girls; prevalence ratios ranged from 2.6 (Arizona and Wisconsin in 2010) to 5.2 boys per one girl (Colorado in 2014). In 2010, ASD prevalence was higher among non-Hispanic white children than among Hispanic children in Arizona and non-Hispanic black children in Missouri; no other differences were observed by race/ethnicity. Among four sites with ≥60% data on cognitive test scores (Arizona, New Jersey, North Carolina, and Utah), the frequency of co-occurring intellectual disabilities was significantly higher among children aged 4 years than among those aged 8 years for each site in each surveillance year except Arizona in 2010. The percentage of children with ASD who had a first evaluation by age 36 months ranged from 48.8% in Missouri in 2012 to 88.9% in Wisconsin in 2014. The percentage of children with a previous ASD diagnosis from a community provider varied by site, ranging from 43.0% for Arizona in 2012 to 86.5% for Missouri in 2012. The median age at earliest known ASD diagnosis varied from 28 months in North Carolina in 2014 to 39.0 months in Missouri and Wisconsin in 2012. In 2014, the ASD prevalence based on the DSM-IV-TR case definition was 20% higher than the prevalence based on the DSM-5 (17.0 versus 14.1 per 1,000, respectively). Trends in ASD prevalence and characteristics among children aged 4 years during the study period were assessed for the three sites with data for all 3 years and consistent data sources (Arizona, Missouri, and New Jersey) using the DSM-IV-TR case definition; prevalence was higher in 2014 than in 2010 among children aged 4 years in New Jersey and was stable in Arizona and Missouri. In Missouri, ASD prevalence was higher among children aged 8 years than among children aged 4 years. The percentage of children with ASD who had a comprehensive evaluation by age 36 months was stable in Arizona and Missouri and decreased in New Jersey. In the three sites, no change occurred in the age at earliest known ASD diagnosis during 2010-2014.

INTERPRETATION

The findings suggest that ASD prevalence among children aged 4 years was higher in 2014 than in 2010 in one site and remained stable in others. Among children with ASD, the frequency of cognitive impairment was higher among children aged 4 years than among those aged 8 years and suggests that surveillance at age 4 years might more often include children with more severe symptoms or those with co-occurring conditions such as intellectual disability. In the sites with data for all years and consistent data sources, no change in the age at earliest known ASD diagnosis was found, and children received their first developmental evaluation at the same or a later age in 2014 compared with 2010. Delays in the initiation of a first developmental evaluation might adversely affect children by delaying access to treatment and special services that can improve outcomes for children with ASD.

PUBLIC HEALTH ACTION

Efforts to increase awareness of ASD and improve the identification of ASD by community providers can facilitate early diagnosis of children with ASD. Heterogeneity of results across sites suggests that community-level differences in evaluation and diagnostic services as well as access to data sources might affect estimates of ASD prevalence and age of identification. Continuing improvements in providing developmental evaluations to children as soon as developmental concerns are identified might result in earlier ASD diagnoses and earlier receipt of services, which might improve developmental outcomes.

摘要

问题/状况:自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)估计影响美国 3%的儿童。对 4 岁儿童进行 ASD 的公共卫生监测,提供了关于患病率趋势、ASD 儿童特征以及减少 ASD 识别年龄的进展情况的信息,以便尽早开始实施基于证据的干预措施。

时期

2010 年、2012 年和 2014 年。

描述

早期自闭症和发育障碍监测(Early ADDM)网络是一个主动监测系统,提供 4 岁儿童 ASD 患病率和特征的两年期估计值,这些儿童的父母或监护人居住在指定地点内。在 2010 年、2012 年或 2014 年的监测年中,数据是在七个地点收集的:亚利桑那州、科罗拉多州、密苏里州、新泽西州、北卡罗来纳州、犹他州和威斯康星州。早期 ADDM 网络是更广泛的 ADDM 网络的一个子集(同期共有 13 个总站点),自 2000 年以来一直在对 8 岁儿童进行 ASD 监测。每个早期 ADDM 站点的地理区域都小于更广泛的 ADDM 网络。早期 ADDM ASD 监测分两个阶段使用相同的方法和项目工作人员进行,与 ADDM 网络相同。第一阶段包括审查和从儿童记录中摘录数据,包括社区专业人员进行的全面评估。这些评估的来源包括一般儿科保健诊所和专门为发育障碍儿童设立的项目。此外,还审查了亚利桑那州、科罗拉多州、新泽西州、北卡罗来纳州和犹他州的特殊教育记录(适用于 3 岁以上的儿童),以及新泽西州、北卡罗来纳州、犹他州和威斯康星州的早期干预记录(适用于 0 至<3 岁的儿童);在威斯康星州,仅审查了 2014 年的早期干预记录。第二阶段涉及使用标准化病例定义和方法审查经过培训的临床医生对摘录评估的情况。如果经过合格专业人员进行的一次或多次全面评估描述了符合精神障碍诊断与统计手册,第四版,技术修订版(DSM-IV-TR)的行为诊断标准的行为,则认为该儿童符合 ASD 监测病例定义,任何以下条件之一:自闭症、广泛性发育障碍-未特定(PDD-NOS,包括非典型自闭症)或阿斯伯格障碍(2010、2012 和 2014 年)。仅 2014 年,根据 DSM-IV-TR 和精神障碍诊断与统计手册,第五版(DSM-5)的监测病例定义进行比较,比较了患病率估计值。本报告提供了 ASD 总患病率和按性别和种族/族裔划分的患病率估计值;4 岁 ASD 儿童的特征,包括首次发育评估的年龄、ASD 诊断的年龄和认知功能;以及早期 ADDM 站点 ASD 患病率和特征的趋势,这些站点在所有 3 年的监测年份(2010、2012 和 2014)中均有数据,包括与居住在同一地理区域的 8 岁儿童进行比较。对 ASD 患病率的时间趋势分析仅限于提供所有 3 年一致数据源的数据的三个站点(亚利桑那州、密苏里州和新泽西州)。

结果

在参与特定年份的早期 ADDM 站点中,2010 年、2012 年和 2014 年 4 岁儿童的 ASD 总患病率分别为每 1000 名儿童 13.4 例、15.3 例和 17.0 例。使用基于 DSM-IV-TR 的监测病例定义确定 ASD 患病率。在每个监测年份中,4 岁儿童的 ASD 患病率在监测站点之间存在差异,密苏里州每年的患病率最低(2010 年、2012 年和 2014 年分别为每 1000 名儿童 8.5、8.1 和 9.6 例),而新泽西州每年的患病率最高(每 1000 名儿童 19.7、22.1 和 28.4 例,分别为同一年份)。审查教育和医疗记录的站点的汇总患病率估计值高于仅审查医疗记录的站点。在所有参与站点和年份中,4 岁儿童的 ASD 患病率男孩均高于女孩;患病率比范围从 2.6(2010 年的亚利桑那州和威斯康星州)到 5.2 个男孩对一个女孩(2014 年的科罗拉多州)。在 2010 年,亚利桑那州和密苏里州的 ASD 患病率在非西班牙裔白人和西班牙裔儿童之间存在差异,密苏里州的非西班牙裔黑人和西班牙裔儿童之间也存在差异;种族/族裔之间没有其他差异。在四个至少有 60%认知测试分数数据的站点中(亚利桑那州、新泽西州、北卡罗来纳州和犹他州),除了 2010 年的亚利桑那州,每个监测年份的每个站点中,年龄在 4 岁的儿童与年龄在 8 岁的儿童相比,共患智力残疾的频率显著更高。在 36 个月之前接受过评估的 ASD 儿童比例范围从 2012 年密苏里州的 48.8%到 2014 年威斯康星州的 88.9%。有社区提供者之前 ASD 诊断的儿童比例因地点而异,范围从 2012 年亚利桑那州的 43.0%到 2012 年密苏里州和威斯康星州的 86.5%。最早已知 ASD 诊断的儿童年龄中位数从 2014 年北卡罗来纳州的 28 个月到 2012 年密苏里州和威斯康星州的 39 个月不等。2014 年,基于 DSM-IV-TR 病例定义的 ASD 患病率比基于 DSM-5 的患病率高 20%(分别为每 1000 名儿童 17.0 例和 14.1 例)。使用基于 DSM-IV-TR 病例定义,对所有 3 年和一致数据源(亚利桑那州、密苏里州和新泽西州)的 4 岁儿童进行 ASD 患病率和特征评估,在 2014 年,新泽西州的 4 岁儿童的 ASD 患病率高于 2010 年,而亚利桑那州和密苏里州则保持稳定。在密苏里州,8 岁儿童的 ASD 患病率高于 4 岁儿童。在 36 个月之前接受全面评估的 ASD 儿童比例在亚利桑那州和密苏里州保持稳定,在新泽西州则下降。在这三个站点中,2010 年至 2014 年间,最早已知 ASD 诊断的年龄没有变化。

结论

研究结果表明,在一个地点,2014 年 4 岁儿童的 ASD 患病率高于 2010 年,而其他地点则保持稳定。在患有 ASD 的儿童中,认知障碍的频率在 4 岁儿童中高于 8 岁儿童,这表明在 4 岁时进行监测可能更经常包括症状更严重的儿童或伴有智力残疾等共病的儿童。在具有所有年份和一致数据源的站点中,最早已知 ASD 诊断的年龄没有变化,与 2010 年相比,儿童在 2014 年接受首次发育评估的年龄相同或更晚。首次发育评估的延迟可能会对儿童产生不利影响,因为这会延迟他们获得治疗和特殊服务的机会,从而改善他们的自闭症预后。

公共卫生行动

提高对 ASD 的认识并改善社区提供者对 ASD 的识别能力,可以促进 ASD 儿童的早期诊断。各站点结果的差异表明,社区层面在评估和诊断服务以及数据来源方面的差异可能会影响 ASD 患病率和识别年龄的估计值。继续努力为儿童提供尽早发现发育问题的发育评估,可能会导致更早的 ASD 诊断和更早的服务提供,从而改善发育结果。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/9d14/6476327/98787bdba289/ss6802a1-F1.jpg

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