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Sleep disorder in autism children is common and it affects the physical, behavior and mental health. There is lack of comprehensive management program/module to treat the sleep disorders in children with ASD. Limited studies evaluating the utility of actigraphy to diagnose sleep disorders in ASD and its validation with PSG are present. Rationale of this study is to develop the comprehensive module and validate it for children with autism spectrum disorders, so as to improve the behavioral outcomes as well. This study also helps to utilize actigraphy as a modality to diagnose sleep disorders in children with autism spectrum disorder as performing PSG in these children is cumbersome and difficult as ASD children tend to have sensory abnormalities.
Full description
Development of module for management of sleep disorders in children with ASD will be done by Delphi method:
Proposed components of Module include
Behavioral intervention
Pharmacological intervention
An 80% agreement over an intervention will be included in the module. The module will be developed within 3 months and ethical approval will be taken for application of this intervention.
Children aged 4 to 10 years attending Pediatric autism clinic and diagnosed with ASD using DSM V criteria, who are on follow up with behavioral therapy at least for 6 months will be included in the study. On routine comprehensive evaluation those children with refractory epilepsy and ASD children with tuberous sclerosis, fragile X syndrome and Down syndrome and metabolic disorders will be excluded.
The child will undergo screening for identification of sleep disorders initially.
They will be called around 11 am on the day of assessment, from 12 noon they will be made to wear the actigraphy watch on the non-dominant wrist.
They will undergo evaluation on CSHQ, half and hour before the stipulated bedtime, PSG electrodes will be attached till lying on bed at the night time, the actigraphy parameters will be recorded as daytime data, once on the bed at night, the data will be recorded as nocturnal actigraphy data. The PSG electrodes will be removed next morning immediately after the child gets up from sleep. Actigraphy watch will be removed at 12 noon the next day.
The CSHQ will be administered by the principal investigator in Hindi or English.
Parents will be asked to answer the questions based on the sleep habits of the child based on the past week. In case the last week was unusual for a specific reason the questions were answered with respect to the most recent typical week Appointment for overnight PSG will be given as per the convenience of the family.
Parents will be advised to continue the child's usual pattern of sleep prior to the test.
For children who are on pharmacological therapy for seizures and behavioral issues, drugs will be continued so as to not interfere with the child's treatment and conform to ethics.
The parents will be told to bring the child on the day of the study with his or her night clothes along with pillows, bedsheets and any other sleep association objects that the child wanted.
The parents will be shown the laboratory once before the actual testing. This will help them in replicating the child's routine sleeping pattern as far as possible in the PSG lab on the night of testing.
Standard overnight multichannel PSG evaluation will be performed with Philips Respironics Alice 6 LDxS PSG system with Axis 5521 PTZ high-resolution camera.
PSG scoring and reporting will be done according to American Academy of Sleep Medicine Manual (version 2.5) and International Classification of Sleep Disorders -3 manual.
The PSG record will be analyzed by Pediatric neurology faculty who are blinded to clinical status and Actigraphy scoring and reporting will be done.
Complete evaluation of behavior (ATEC, CBCL, CARS-2, sensory profile, DP-3 and ABC) will be done for all children undergoing screening polysomnography, actigraphy on the same day.
CARS is done to estimate the severity of autism. It is different for high functioning children (IQ >80, age >6 years with fluent speech), with scores of 15-27.5 being minimal; 28-33.5 mild to moderate; and more than 34 is severe. For other children (age <6 years, without fluent speech) score of 15-29.5; 15-27.5(age for 13+,IQ<80) is minimal, 30-36.5 (age <6 years, without fluent speech) ;28-34.5(age for 13+,IQ<80) is mild to moderate and (age <6 years, without fluent speech) score of 37 and higher , score of 35 and higher (age for 13+,IQ<80) shows severe symptoms of Autism Spectrum Disorder. The CARS is a 15-item scale used to grade the severity of autism in 14 behavioral domains.
CBCL is used for determining the behavioral comorbidities. The CBCL assesses behavior in 11 domains and there are two sets of questionnaires, one for 1.5 to 5 years of age and another for 5 to 18 years of age which is separate for boys and girls.
Development Profile 3 (DP3) is used to estimate the development or intelligent quotient. The DP3 assesses DQ/IQ in 5 domains (Physical behavior, Adaptive Behavior, Cognition, Social Emotional and Communication) by parental reporting as well as direct observation.
The Autism Treatment Evaluation Checklist (ATEC) was designed to assist parents, physicians and researchers to evaluate virtually any treatment for autism. It includes scoring in Speech/ Language/ Communication sociability, sensory and cognitive awareness, health/physical/behavior.
The Autism Behavior Checklist (ABC) was designed to offer a method to more objectively identify autism in children. The scale utilizes an observer's rating of the child's behavior to quantify behaviors typically associated with Autism. The ABC was developed as a clinical measure to screen for autism in individuals 3-35 years of age. The scale was developed in 1980 and has not undergone revision since then. The ABC consists of 57 items and 5 scales (1) Sensory, (2) Relating, (3) Body and Object use, (4) Language and (5) Social and Self-help.
If the child is found to have sleep disorder according to ICSD -3 criteria, then they will be enrolled in the study after informed consent to undergo intervention.
They will be given module-based intervention according to the disorder child is found to have.
They will be followed up telephonically every 2 weeks and in OPD/Clinic every 4 weeks to ensure compliance with intervention.
After 6 months of intervention, CSHQ, PSG and actigraphy evaluation of behavior (ATEC, CBCL, CARS-2, sensory profile, DP-3 and ABC) will be repeated in the same method used before giving intervention.
Pre and post CSHQ scores, actigraphy and polysomnography, behavioral scores will be compared , and correlation between actigraphy and polysomnography will be measured.
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25 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Sheffali Gulati, MD; Sheffali Gulati, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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