comparemela.com

Objective To summarize the breadth and quality of evidence supporting commonly recommended early childhood autism interventions and their estimated effects on developmental outcomes.

Design Updated systematic review and meta-analysis (autism intervention meta-analysis; Project AIM).

Data sources A search was conducted in November 2021 (updating a search done in November 2017) of the following databases and registers: Academic Search Complete, CINAHL Plus with full text, Education Source, Educational Administration Abstracts, ERIC, Medline, ProQuest Dissertations and Theses, PsycINFO, Psychology and Behavioral Sciences Collection, and SocINDEX with full text, Trials , and ClinicalTrials.gov.

Eligibility criteria for selecting studies Any controlled group study testing the effects of any non-pharmacological intervention on any outcome in young autistic children younger than 8 years.

Review methods Newly identified studies were integrated into the previous dataset and were coded for participant, intervention, and outcome characteristics. Interventions were categorized by type of approach (such as behavioral, developmental, naturalistic developmental behavioral intervention, and technology based), and outcomes were categorized by domain (such as social communication, adaptive behavior, play, and language). Risks of bias were evaluated following guidance from Cochrane. Effects were estimated for all intervention and outcome types with sufficient contributing data, stratified by risk of bias, using robust variance estimation to account for intercorrelation of effects within studies and subgroups.

Results The search yielded 289 reports of 252 studies, representing 13 304 participants and effects for 3291 outcomes. When contributing effects were restricted to those from randomized controlled trials, significant summary effects were estimated for behavioral interventions on social emotional or challenging behavior outcomes (Hedges’ g=0.58, 95% confidence interval 0.11 to 1.06; P=0.02), developmental interventions on social communication (0.28, 0.12 to 0.44; P=0.003); naturalistic developmental behavioral interventions on adaptive behavior (0.23, 0.02 to 0.43; P=0.03), language (0.16, 0.01 to 0.31; P=0.04), play (0.19, 0.02 to 0.36; P=0.03), social communication (0.35, 0.23 to 0.47; P<0.001), and measures of diagnostic characteristics of autism (0.38, 0.17 to 0.59; P=0.002); and technology based interventions on social communication (0.33, 0.02 to 0.64; P=0.04) and social emotional or challenging behavior outcomes (0.57, 0.04 to 1.09; P=0.04). When effects were further restricted to exclude caregiver or teacher report outcomes, significant effects were estimated only for developmental interventions on social communication (0.31, 0.13 to 0.49; P=0.003) and naturalistic developmental behavioral interventions on social communication (0.36, 0.23 to 0.49; P<0.001) and measures of diagnostic characteristics of autism (0.44, 0.20 to 0.68; P=0.002). When effects were then restricted to exclude those at high risk of detection bias, only one significant summary effect was estimated—naturalistic developmental behavioral interventions on measures of diagnostic characteristics of autism (0.30, 0.03 to 0.57; P=0.03). Adverse events were poorly monitored, but possibly common.

Conclusion The available evidence on interventions to support young autistic children has approximately doubled in four years. Some evidence from randomized controlled trials shows that behavioral interventions improve caregiver perception of challenging behavior and child social emotional functioning, and that technology based interventions support proximal improvements in specific social communication and social emotional skills. Evidence also shows that developmental interventions improve social communication in interactions with caregivers, and naturalistic developmental behavioral interventions improve core challenges associated with autism, particularly difficulties with social communication. However, potential benefits of these interventions cannot be weighed against the potential for adverse effects owing to inadequate monitoring and reporting.

The coding manual that guided primary data extraction, and the full dataset are available at <https://osf.io/kr2cd/>

Related Keywords

United States ,Texas ,Sandbank ,Argyll And Bute ,United Kingdom ,Australia ,Arkansas ,New Jersey ,Denver ,Colorado ,Suzanne Albarran ,Shannon Crowley Lapoint ,Kristen Bottema Beutel ,Kacie Dunham ,Nicolette Caldwell ,D Jonah Barrett ,Jacobi Feldman ,Tiffany Woynaroski ,National Institutes Of Health ,Jersey Autism Center ,National Disability Insurance Scheme Of Australia ,Vanderbilt Institute For Clinical ,National Center ,Behavioral Sciences Collection ,National Institute For Health ,Department Of Hearing ,Human Services ,Educational Administration Abstracts ,Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee ,Arkansas Association For Behavior Analysis ,Translational Research ,Us Department Of Health ,Rr Core Team ,Speech Sciences At Vanderbilt University Medical Center ,Autism Program ,National Institute On Deafness ,Micheal Sandbank ,Crowley Lapoint ,Jonah Barrett ,Academic Search Complete ,Education Source ,Proquest Dissertations ,National Institute ,Care Excellence ,Kelton Wells ,Advancing Translational Sciences ,National Institutes ,Communication Disorders ,New Jersey Autism Center ,National Disability Insurance Scheme ,Behavior Analyst Certification Board ,Clinical Guide ,Early Interventions ,Arkansas Association ,Arkansas Medicaid ,Texas Medicaid ,Vanderbilt Institute ,Speech Sciences ,Vanderbilt University Medical Center ,Open Access ,Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial ,

© 2025 Vimarsana

comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.