Abstract

We investigated early behavioural markers of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) using the Autism Observational Scale for Infants (AOSI) in a prospective familial high-risk (HR) sample of infant siblings (N=54) and low-risk (LR) controls (N=50). The AOSI was completed at 7 and 14 month infant visits and children were seen again at age 24 and 36 months. Diagnostic outcome of ASD (HR-ASD) versus no ASD (HR-No ASD) was determined for the HR sample at the latter timepoint. The HR group scored higher than the LR group at 7 months and marginally but non-significantly higher than the LR group at 14 months, although these differences did not remain when verbal and nonverbal developmental level were covaried. The HR-ASD outcome group had higher AOSI scores than the LR group at 14 months but not 7 months, even when developmental level was taken into account. The HR-No ASD outcome group had scores intermediate between the HR-ASD and LR groups. At both timepoints a few individual items were higher in the HR-ASD and HR-No ASD outcome groups compared to the LR group and these included both social (e.g. orienting to name) and non-social (e.g. visual tracking) behaviours. AOSI scores at 14 months but not at 7 months were moderately correlated with later scores on the autism diagnostic observation schedule (ADOS) suggesting continuity of autistic-like behavioural atypicality but only from the second and not first year of life. The scores of HR siblings who did not go on to have ASD were intermediate between the HR-ASD outcome and LR groups, consistent with the notion of a broader autism phenotype.

Highlights

  • Younger siblings of children with an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) represent a high-risk group for ASD, with recent estimates of the recurrence rate in siblings as high as 18.7% (Ozonoff et al, 2011)

  • It is hoped that understanding the ordering and interactive influences of the earliest biological and behavioural perturbations will elucidate developmental mechanisms that lead to the pattern of symptoms and impairments that characterise the clinical phenotype, as well as protective mechanisms that differentiate those at familial risk who go on to have non-ASD outcomes

  • In terms of individual Autism Observation Scale for Infants (AOSI) items we found no HR vs. LR group differences at 7 m and HR siblings only scored higher than LR controls on one item at 14 m

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Summary

Introduction

Younger siblings of children with an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) represent a high-risk group for ASD, with recent estimates of the recurrence rate in siblings as high as 18.7% (Ozonoff et al, 2011). It is hoped that understanding the ordering and interactive influences of the earliest biological and behavioural perturbations will elucidate developmental mechanisms that lead to the pattern of symptoms and impairments that characterise the clinical phenotype, as well as protective mechanisms that differentiate those at familial risk who go on to have non-ASD outcomes. This may in turn point to targets for treatment as well as improving identification of those infants at highest risk for the disorder in infancy, allowing very early intervention to be put in place (Green et al, 2013, in press)

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