Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05604326

Evaluating the Efficacy of Pathways Parent-Mediated Early Autism Intervention on Social Attention and Language

Evaluating the Efficacy of Pathways Early Autism Intervention on Social Orienting, Joint Attention and Social Language: a Randomized Control Trial

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
58 (actual)
Sponsor
The University of Texas at Dallas · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
12 Months – 42 Months
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to compare the efficacy of Pathways parent-mediated early autism intervention (Pathways) and a parent education intervention (PEI) delivered to culturally and linguistically diverse families with children 12-42 months of age suspected of or diagnosed with autism. Question 1: Is Pathways more effective than a PEI at (a) fostering the development of social orienting, joint attention, and social communication and language in children with a research diagnosis of autism and (b) relieving their parents' stress? Question 2: Is the magnitude of the relationship between early and later developing attention greater in children whose parents receive Pathways compared to children whose parents receive PEI? Question 3: Is the magnitude of the relationship between joint attention and social communication and language greater in children whose parents receive Pathways compared to children whose parents receive PEI? Participants will be randomized into 24 weeks of Pathways or PEI. Participants will receive a battery of assessments to evaluate the child's cognitive, social attention, social communication, language, and adaptive functioning, and parental stress at four different time points spaced every 12 weeks from baseline to three-month follow-up.

Detailed description

This study aims to evaluate the efficacy of all ten units of Pathways parent-coaching early autism intervention. A limitation of our previous 12-week intervention research was that in 12 weeks, we could only assess efficacy for the first five Pathways units. The first five units focus on dyadic social skills (i.e., social orienting, mutual gaze, getting the social partner's attention, and mutual imitation). The last five Pathways units (units 6-10) build on these foundational skills and focus on facilitating triadic social skills (i.e., joint attention, social communication, and language). Joint attention is an essential component of social communication and provides the context for social communication and language. Therefore, it is vital to establish the efficacy of the entire Pathways program (i.e., all ten units) on the development of social orienting, joint attention, social communication, and language. Aim 1: To identify the effectiveness of the entire Pathways program on (a) the development of social orienting, joint attention, and social communication and language in children with a research diagnosis of autism; and (b) relieving their parents' stress. Aim 2: To identify the relationship between early social orienting and later joint attention, social communication, and language skills. We hypothesize that Pathways will moderate the effect of (1) growth in social orienting after receiving 12 weeks of intervention and (2) growth in joint attention and social communication and language after receiving 24 weeks of intervention. Further, we hypothesize social orienting after 12 weeks of intervention is significantly related to joint attention at 24 weeks. Finally, we expect that joint attention at 24 weeks will be significantly related to language at 36 weeks (i.e., at a 3-month follow-up). In terms of parenting stress, we expect to find a significant effect of Pathways on decreasing parent stress during the first 12 weeks of intervention, followed by a plateau.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALPathways InterventionPathways-trained research clinicians will conduct 90-minute weekly coaching sessions with caregivers (in English or Spanish) in the family's home or other convenient location. Caregivers will receive a written and audio version of the program manual in English or Spanish, depending on the family's home language. Sessions will review information about autism, interactional strategies, and Applied Behavioral Analysis (ABA) techniques from the program manual, demonstrate intervention strategies, and provide caregivers with practice feedback and self-reflection.
BEHAVIORALParent Education Intervention (PEI)Caregivers will access a 20-30-minute video lesson and associated handouts (in English or Spanish, depending on the parent's home language) every other week for 24 weeks. On the off week, the caregiver will meet with a trained clinician (in English or Spanish) for 30 minutes without the child. Lessons will cover autism, social attention delays, evidence-based interventions, self-regulation, talking with your child, playing with your child, principles of managing behavior, knowing your rights, and self-care. The first and last visit will occur in the family's home or another convenient location. All other visits will take place over Zoom videoconferencing software.

Timeline

Start date
2022-10-27
Primary completion
2025-02-01
Completion
2025-02-01
First posted
2022-11-03
Last updated
2025-03-21

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05604326. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.