Nollace Leslie, Cravero Cora, Abbou Alice, Mazda-Walter Brice, Bleibtreu Alexandre, Pereirra Nathalie, Sainte-Marie Myriam, Cohen David, Giannitelli Marianna
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Reference Centre for Rare Psychiatric Diseases, APHP. Sorbonne Université, 75013 Paris, France.
Interdepartmental Mobile Unit for Complex Situations in Autism (UMI 75-92), Elan Retrouvé Foundation, 75009 Paris, France.
J Clin Med. 2020 Sep 11;9(9):2937. doi: 10.3390/jcm9092937.
COVID-19 has become pandemic and can impact individuals with autism as well. Here, we report a case series admitted to a neurobehavioral unit dedicated to challenging behaviors in patients with autism.
We describe 16 patients (mean age 20.8 years; range 12-43 years; 76% male) with autism hospitalized between March 2020 and mid-April 2020 for challenging behaviors, for which COVID-19 disease has been suspected and who needed both psychiatric and medical care. A close cooperation with the Infectious and Tropical Diseases Department was organized to limit viral spread and training sessions (e.g., hygiene, clinical COVID-19 monitoring, virus testing) were given to staff members.
Most patients had severe autism and severe/moderate intellectual disability. Eleven patients were already in the unit when it was hit by the pandemic, and five were admitted from the community. Based on a virus search via reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) or serology at the 2-month follow-up, we had 11 confirmed COVID-19 cases. The main COVID-19 symptoms included benign upper respiratory infection signs ( = 9, 81.8%), diarrhea ( = 7, 63.6%), fatigue ( = 7, 63.6%), and respiratory signs ( = 5, 45.5%), including one patient who needed oxygen therapy. Three patients remained asymptomatic and COVID-19-free (including two under immunosuppressive treatments). Among the symptomatic patients, five showed atypical behaviors that we understood as idiosyncratic manifestations (e.g., irrepressible licking behavior). On day 14, only one patient with respiratory dysfunction still had a positive RT-PCR SARS-CoV-2 test.
Organizing a COVID+ unit for patients with autism is realistic and requires close collaboration with infectologists. We believe that this initiative should be promoted to limit both the spread of the virus and the ostracism of patients with autism and challenging behaviors.
新型冠状病毒肺炎已成为大流行病,也会对自闭症患者产生影响。在此,我们报告一系列入住致力于治疗自闭症患者挑战行为的神经行为科病房的病例。
我们描述了16例(平均年龄20.8岁;范围12 - 43岁;76%为男性)自闭症患者,他们于2020年3月至2020年4月中旬因挑战行为住院,怀疑感染新型冠状病毒肺炎,且需要精神科和医疗护理。与感染性疾病和热带病科密切合作以限制病毒传播,并为工作人员开展培训课程(如卫生、新型冠状病毒肺炎临床监测、病毒检测)。
大多数患者患有重度自闭症和重度/中度智力残疾。11例患者在病房受疫情影响时已在病房,5例从社区入院。在2个月随访时通过逆转录聚合酶链反应(RT-PCR)或血清学进行病毒检测,我们有11例确诊的新型冠状病毒肺炎病例。新型冠状病毒肺炎的主要症状包括良性上呼吸道感染体征(n = 9,81.8%)、腹泻(n = 7,63.6%)、疲劳(n = 7,63.6%)和呼吸道体征(n = 5,45.5%),其中1例患者需要吸氧治疗。3例患者无症状且未感染新型冠状病毒肺炎(包括2例接受免疫抑制治疗的患者)。在有症状的患者中,5例表现出非典型行为,我们将其理解为特殊表现(如无法抑制的舔舐行为)。在第14天,只有1例有呼吸功能障碍的患者RT-PCR检测新型冠状病毒2仍为阳性。
为自闭症患者设立新冠阳性病房是可行的,且需要与感染病专家密切合作。我们认为应推广这一举措,以限制病毒传播以及自闭症和有挑战行为患者所遭受的排斥。