Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, MIND Institute, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2020 Jan;61(1):88-94. doi: 10.1111/jcpp.13105. Epub 2019 Aug 1.
Signs of autism are present in the first 2 years of life, but the average age of diagnosis lags far behind. Instruments that improve detection of autism risk in infancy are needed. This study developed and tested the psychometric properties of a novel video-based approach to detecting ASD in infancy.
A prospective longitudinal study of children at elevated or lower risk for autism spectrum disorder was conducted. Participants were 76 infants with an older sibling with ASD and 37 infants with no known family history of autism. The Video-referenced Infant Rating System for Autism (VIRSA) is a web-based application that presents pairs of videos of parents and infants playing together and requires forced-choice judgments of which video is most similar to the child being rated. Parents rated participants on the VIRSA at 6, 9, 12, and 18 months of age. We examined split-half and test-retest reliability; convergent and discriminant validity; and sensitivity, specificity, and negative and positive predictive value for concurrent and 36-month ASD diagnoses.
The VIRSA demonstrated satisfactory reliability and convergent and discriminant validity. VIRSA ratings were significantly lower for children ultimately diagnosed with ASD than children with typical development by 12 months of age. VIRSA scores at 18 months identified all children diagnosed with ASD at that age, as well as 78% of children diagnosed at 36 months.
This study represents an initial step in the development of a novel video-based approach to detection of ASD in infancy. The VIRSA's psychometric properties were promising when used by parents with an older affected child, but still must be tested in community samples with no family history of ASD. If results are replicated, then the VIRSA's low-burden, web-based format has the potential to reduce disparities in communities with limited access to screening.
自闭症的迹象在生命的头 2 年就已经出现,但诊断的平均年龄远远落后。需要有提高婴儿自闭症风险检测的仪器。本研究开发并测试了一种新的基于视频的方法来检测婴儿自闭症的心理测量学特性。
对自闭症谱系障碍高风险或低风险的儿童进行前瞻性纵向研究。参与者为 76 名有自闭症谱系障碍哥哥或姐姐的婴儿和 37 名无自闭症家族史的婴儿。视频参考婴儿自闭症评定系统(VIRSA)是一个基于网络的应用程序,它呈现父母和婴儿一起玩耍的视频对,并要求对哪一个视频与被评定的孩子最相似进行强制选择判断。父母在婴儿 6、9、12 和 18 个月时在 VIRSA 上对参与者进行评定。我们检查了分半信度和重测信度;收敛和辨别效度;以及同时期和 36 个月自闭症诊断的敏感性、特异性、阴性和阳性预测值。
VIRSA 表现出令人满意的可靠性和收敛性和辨别效度。最终被诊断为自闭症的儿童的 VIRSA 评分在 12 个月时明显低于发育正常的儿童。18 个月时的 VIRSA 评分识别出了所有在该年龄被诊断为自闭症的儿童,以及 78%在 36 个月时被诊断为自闭症的儿童。
本研究代表了开发一种新的基于视频的方法来检测婴儿自闭症的初步步骤。当由有受影响的年长孩子的父母使用时,VIRSA 的心理测量学特性很有希望,但仍必须在没有自闭症家族史的社区样本中进行测试。如果结果得到复制,那么 VIRSA 的低负担、基于网络的格式有可能减少在社区中自闭症筛查机会有限的差异。