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CBT for Youth With Autism and Emotional/Behavioral Needs in Community Care Settings (CYAN)

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) logo

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Autism

Treatments

Behavioral: Behavioral Interventions for Anxiety in Children with Autism (BIACA)
Behavioral: Treatment-as-Usual Supplemented by Internet-Based Self-Instruction (MEYA)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT05031364
AR200108

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study is a 4-year randomized, controlled trial comparing cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) to usual clinical care for children (aged 6-14 years) with autism and emotional dysregulation (e.g., irritability, anxiety). We will randomly assign 50 mental health clinicians, each treating 2 youth (N = 100 youth total), to CBT program for emotional dysregulation and core autism symptoms with weekly live consultation with an expert or to usual clinical care augmented by self-instruction in CBT, in a 1:1 allocation. The CBT manual is well-supported in our efficacy research, has been replicated in other centers, is free/open-access (meya.ucla.edu), and has user-friendly digital and traditional print materials for mental health clinicians (e.g., psychologists, counselors) to use in preparing for and conducting therapy sessions. The primary outcome measure will be assessed weekly. Additional assessments will occur at Screening, Mid-treatment, Post- treatment and 3-month Follow-up.

Enrollment

100 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

6 to 14 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Clinician's inclusion criteria: All practitioner participants will regularly treat at least some youth with ASD within a recognized field of practice (e.g., clinical psychology, counseling, marital and family therapy, social work) and will serve youth with ASD referred by the Regional Centers, Tricare/NMCSD, or the California public schools. Practitioners will agree to invite one or more potentially eligible families of youth with ASD so that, in total, at least 2 of the new families referred to them participate in the study (i.e., each clinician will aim to have a cluster of two families randomized to the same condition with them; however, the two referrals can be non-parallel and clinicians will not be required to enroll a second client to remain in the study, since there is no way for them to guarantee future enrollment from client families. As needed, additional clinicians can be enrolled in the study to reach the target of 100 youth.). Up to four families per practitioner will be allowed so long as the minimum study enrollment of at least 50 practitioners and 100 client families randomized is met.

Youth inclusion criteria: Youth participants will be boys or girls between 6 and 14 years of age with a documented clinical diagnosis of ASD and will be newly referred for outpatient services with a participating clinician. Additional eligibility criteria are as follows:

  1. Youth will have a pre-existing clinical diagnosis of ASD made by an appropriate licensed professional (e.g., clinical psychologist, developmental pediatrician) which will be documented in a report or medical note provided by the family, or confirmed telephonically by the diagnosing professional.
  2. The parent-reported Social Responsive Scale-2 (SRS-2; Constantino & Gruber, 2012) Total T-Score will be > 60 (cut-score maximizing ROC curve parameters for screening for ASD; area under the curve = 98.8%; Schanding et al., 2011).
  3. Youth will meet criteria for clinically significant emotion dysregulation symptoms as defined by a minimum T-score of 60 on the Externalizing or Internalizing subscales of the parent-reported Brief Problem Monitor (BPM) and at least 15 T-score points over 50 between these two BPM subscales (e.g., Internalizing=60 + Externalizing=55).
  4. The youth has a Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales-3 Communication Composite Standard Score > 60 and Expressive Communication subscale v-score > 8 (in both cases > 1st %ile).

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. For participants presenting with severe comorbid symptomology (e.g., psychotic symptoms), the comorbid conditions cannot be sufficiently severe to warrant immediate treatment or require ongoing medication titration.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

100 participants in 2 patient groups

Consultation-Based Training on BIACA
Experimental group
Description:
Community mental health clinicians will be given online one-on-one training and consultation in the BIACA (Behavioral Interventions for Anxiety in Children with Autism; e.g., Wood et al., 2020) CBT program. Clinicians will be provided with weekly 30-minute video-conference-based consultation sessions with an expert in BIACA. These consultation sessions are manual-driven and utilize a Practice-Based Coaching format, in which a trained consultant meets weekly with clinicians to provide practice-based feedback (cf. McLeod et al., 2018). Consultation meetings include agenda setting, case material review, planning for the next treatment session, and a meeting summary. Relevant online training materials (e.g., demonstration videos of CBT sessions; corresponding written session materials) developed in the context of a NIMH R34 grant available on meya.ucla.edu (1R34MH110591) will also be provided to clinicians for each upcoming therapy session.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Behavioral Interventions for Anxiety in Children with Autism (BIACA)
Usual Care Augmented by Self-Instruction Resources for CBT for Autism
Active Comparator group
Description:
Community mental health clinicians in this arm will provide any therapy, counseling, and/or behavioral treatment procedures they deem appropriate for each participating child. Clinicians randomized to this arm will be given immediate access to CBT-for-autism self-instruction materials that are already freely available to any clinician at meya.ucla.edu (see Consultation-Based Training on BIACA arm, above), to supplement their usual clinical care, if they so choose, until they complete their Usual Care/Self-Instruction participation and are offered direct training and weekly consultation in BIACA.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Treatment-as-Usual Supplemented by Internet-Based Self-Instruction (MEYA)

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

3

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Central trial contact

Wood

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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