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Providing Accessible Diagnostic Evaluations and Psychoeducation for Autism Spectrum Disorder in Rural Southwest Virginia

Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University logo

Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Autism Spectrum Disorder

Treatments

Behavioral: Telehealth Psychoeducation (TH)
Behavioral: Psychoeducation as Usual (PAU)
Behavioral: In-person Psychoeducation (IP)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT05822921
UL1TR003015 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
19-423

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study will be the pilot/feasibility phase of a future clinical trial. The proposed feasibility and pilot study aims to bridge the barriers to diagnosis by providing easy-to-access assessment for free, through a mobile unit that travels to rural locations and telehealth assessments. The diagnostic evaluation will confirm or rule out a diagnosis of ASD, followed by purposeful ASD psychoeducation for parents whose children are diagnosed.

Parents of children who meet criteria for a diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) or are suspected to have ASD will be randomized into one of three groups (i.e., in-person psychoeducation, telehealth psychoeducation, or "psychoeducation as usual" with paper psychoeducation materials). Parents will complete outcome measures related to their satisfaction, empowerment, and autism spectrum disorder knowledge. Changes in empowerment and ASD knowledge from pre- to post- psychoeducation will be measured using t-tests. The investigators will also track if participants sought and/or received additional ASD-related services throughout the study up to 6-months post-psychoeducation. Results from this study will help to guide a future, fully powered efficacy trial with a larger sample.

Added April 2020: In light of the Virginia governor's stay-at-home order in response to the COVID-19 outbreak, the investigators are altering the protocol in line with the university's request to move to remote conduct of research where possible as well as to continue to provide services to families in this time, in line with Executive Order 53 from the VA Governor. Parents in the latter half of the study conducted entirely remotely, will be randomized into the two psychoeducation conditions, telehealth or paper materials psychoeducation groups, as in-person visits are not permitted. Statistical analyses will be added to compare results between and within those who received in-person versus telehealth assessments. The investigators and participants may return to in-person assessments if and when it is possible to do so, but reserve the right to continue tele-assessment even once stay-at-home orders are lifted, in order to fully answer the research aim of the feasibility and validity or tele-assessment procedures in ASD.

Full description

This study will be the pilot/feasibility phase of a future clinical trial. The proposed feasibility and pilot study aims to bridge the barriers to diagnosis by providing easy-to-access assessment for free, through a mobile unit that travels to rural locations and telehealth assessments. The diagnostic evaluation will confirm or rule out a diagnosis of ASD, followed by purposeful ASD psychoeducation for parents whose children are diagnosed.

Parents of children who meet criteria for a diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) or are suspected to have ASD will be randomized into one of three groups (i.e., in-person psychoeducation, telehealth psychoeducation, or "psychoeducation as usual" with paper psychoeducation materials). Parents will complete outcome measures related to their satisfaction, empowerment, and autism spectrum disorder knowledge. Changes in empowerment and ASD knowledge from pre- to post-psychoeducation will be measured using t-tests. The investigators will also track if participants sought and/or received additional ASD-related services throughout the study, up to 6-months post-psychoeducation. Results from this study will help to guide a future, fully powered efficacy trial with a larger sample.

Added April 2020:

In light of the Virginia governor's stay-at-home order in response to the COVID-19 outbreak, which reached pandemic status approximately halfway through data collection, all in-person research and clinical services have been paused at Virginia Tech as of March 13, 2020. To continue to provide services to families in this time, in line with Executive Order 53 from the VA Governor to ensure that the stay-at-home orders do not limit the provision of health care or medical services, this study will begin exploring the feasibility of conducting tele-assessment, a comprehensive assessment battery via a secure video platform and phone.

As such, the protocol is altered to be in line with the university's request to move to remote conduct of research where possible. For the remaining half of participants, the investigators will replace the mobile assessment battery with a tele-assessment battery, delivered via secure online video platform ZoomHIPAA and/or by phone (totaling up to 7 hours of assessment). As such, the protocol is revised to include tele-assessments (no in-person assessments) and randomly assigning eligible participants to either the telehealth or paper materials psychoeducation groups. All outcome measures will remain the same, but will be collected online or by telephone. The investigators and participants may return to in-person assessments if and when it is possible, but reserve the right to continue tele-assessment even once stay-at-home orders are lifted.

The aims of the project will be altered somewhat by the updated procedure. The study will be significantly underpowered to analyze the differences between psychoeducation conditions within and between each assessment modality (i.e., in-person vs. telehealth), therefore in person and telehealth conditions will be combined into one psychoeducation (PE) group with clinician-led sessions. The mean differences between the PE group and the psychoeducation as usual (i.e., paper materials) formats will be preliminarily explored, in terms of both feasibility and satisfaction of the psychoeducation services and changes in outcome measures (i.e., FES and ASK-Q). Pending permission to return to in-person assessments, analyses will also report alignment between diagnoses made via tele-assessment (CARS-2 and ADI-R) and a later in-person administration of the ADOS-2.

Enrollment

21 patients

Sex

All

Ages

16 months to 17 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Parent(s)/Caregiver(s) to a child between the ages of 16 months through 17 years old with autism concern, who are seeking a diagnostic assessment, and live in a rural underserved community
  • Recruitment in line with gender ratio seen in the prevalence of ASD (i.e., 4.2 boys to 1 girl)
  • English-speaking parent
  • Added April 2020: For the second half of the study (Tele-assessment), parents must have a computer, laptop, or tablet (at least 9.7 inches diagonally) with web-camera and stable Internet.

Exclusion criteria

  • Children participants who will turn 18 before their participation in the study has ended
  • If a family does not have Internet and computer access, the family will not be excluded, but will be randomized into a group other than the telehealth psychoeducation group.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

21 participants in 3 patient groups

In-person Psychoeducation
Experimental group
Treatment:
Behavioral: In-person Psychoeducation (IP)
Telehealth Psychoeducation
Experimental group
Treatment:
Behavioral: Telehealth Psychoeducation (TH)
Psychoeducation as Usual
Active Comparator group
Treatment:
Behavioral: Psychoeducation as Usual (PAU)

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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