Stepped-Care Cognitive-Behavioral Treatment for Youth With ASD and Anxiety



Status:Recruiting
Conditions:Anxiety, Healthy Studies, Neurology, Psychiatric, Autism
Therapuetic Areas:Neurology, Psychiatry / Psychology, Other
Healthy:No
Age Range:4 - 14
Updated:1/25/2019
Start Date:February 1, 2019
End Date:December 31, 2020
Contact:Eric Storch, Ph.D.
Email:eric.storch@bcm.edu
Phone:713-798-1495

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Parent-Led Stepped-Care Cognitive-Behavioral Treatment for Youth With ASD and Co-occurring Anxiety

This study implements a parent-led, flexible, individually-tailored cognitive-behavioral
intervention for children with ASD and anxiety.

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) affects as many as 1 out of 59 individuals, with many
higher-functioning youth not diagnosed until school-age or later. This equates to ~102,000
children under the age of 14 years in the state of Texas alone. Significant impairment in
social and adaptive functioning are common, as are comorbid behavioral health disorders, with
anxiety disorders affecting between 50-80% of youth with ASD. Given the relative frequency of
anxiety disorders among children with ASD, the associated impairment, and worsening
trajectory over time without intervention, there is a great need for treatment that
specifically addresses anxiety-related symptoms in ASD. Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT)
has been established as a first-line treatment for anxiety disorders among youth with and
without ASD. A particular form of CBT, Behavioral Intervention for Anxiety in Children with
ASD (BIACA), has demonstrated efficacy in a number of studies. However, treatment is
delivered by therapists as "full-packages" (i.e., 12-16 clinic sessions), which can be
therapist-intensive, costly, impractical for families, and not responsive to parental
preferences. Alternatives approaches, such as parent-led, stepped-care models that improve
accessibility, are efficient, provide personalized care, and lower mental health treatment
cost, are greatly needed. Stepped-care models provide a lower-intensity first step (e.g.,
parent-led, less costly, and more convenient for parents) as the initial treatment with the
assumption that a proportion of individuals will respond to the first step and others will
need to step up to more intensive treatment. Matching treatment to families' needs and
tailoring subsequent treatment may be an efficient and effective approach, as well as
consistent with parents' desire to help their child. Given this, together with the
substantial impairment associated with clinical anxiety in individuals with ASD across the
age span, this study implements a parent-led, flexible, individually-tailored
cognitive-behavioral intervention for children with ASD and anxiety.

Inclusion Criteria:

- Child is between the ages 4-14 years at consent/assent.

- The child meets criteria for ASD.

- The child meets criteria for clinically significant anxiety and/or OCD symptoms.

- Anxiety and/or OCD is the primary presenting problem.

- One parent/guardian is able and willing to attend.

- The child has a Full Scale and Verbal Comprehension Intelligence Quotient >70.

Exclusion Criteria:

- The child has a diagnosis of lifetime DSM-5 bipolar disorder, psychotic disorder,
and/or intellectual disability.

- The child has severe current suicidal/homicidal ideation and/or self-injury requiring
medical intervention.

- The child is receiving concurrent psychotherapy for anxiety.

- Initiation of a psychotropic medication less than 4 weeks prior to study enrollment or
a stimulant/psychoactive medication less than 2 weeks prior to study enrollment.
We found this trial at
1
site
1200 Moursund Street
Houston, Texas 77030
(713) 798-4951
Principal Investigator: Eric A Storch, PhD
Phone: 713-798-2465
Baylor College of Medicine Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, the only private medical school...
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mi
from
Houston, TX
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