8岁儿童自闭症谱系障碍患病率研究——自闭症与发育障碍监测网络,美国,2014。

IF 37.3 1区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Mmwr Surveillance Summaries Pub Date : 2018-04-27 DOI:10.15585/mmwr.ss6706a1
Jon Baio, Lisa Wiggins, Deborah L Christensen, Matthew J Maenner, Julie Daniels, Zachary Warren, Margaret Kurzius-Spencer, Walter Zahorodny, Cordelia Robinson Rosenberg, Tiffany White, Maureen S Durkin, Pamela Imm, Loizos Nikolaou, Marshalyn Yeargin-Allsopp, Li-Ching Lee, Rebecca Harrington, Maya Lopez, Robert T Fitzgerald, Amy Hewitt, Sydney Pettygrove, John N Constantino, Alison Vehorn, Josephine Shenouda, Jennifer Hall-Lande, Kim Van Naarden Braun, Nicole F Dowling
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ADDM surveillance is conducted in two phases. The first phase involves review and abstraction of comprehensive evaluations that were completed by professional service providers in the community. Staff completing record review and abstraction receive extensive training and supervision and are evaluated according to strict reliability standards to certify effective initial training, identify ongoing training needs, and ensure adherence to the prescribed methodology. Record review and abstraction occurs in a variety of data sources ranging from general pediatric health clinics to specialized programs serving children with developmental disabilities. In addition, most of the ADDM sites also review records for children who have received special education services in public schools. In the second phase of the study, all abstracted information is reviewed systematically by experienced clinicians to determine ASD case status. A child is considered to meet the surveillance case definition for ASD if he or she displays behaviors, as described on one or more comprehensive evaluations completed by community-based professional providers, consistent with the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, Text Revision (DSM-IV-TR) diagnostic criteria for autistic disorder; pervasive developmental disorder-not otherwise specified (PDD-NOS, including atypical autism); or Asperger disorder. This report provides updated ASD prevalence estimates for children aged 8 years during the 2014 surveillance year, on the basis of DSM-IV-TR criteria, and describes characteristics of the population of children with ASD. In 2013, the American Psychiatric Association published the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5), which made considerable changes to ASD diagnostic criteria. The change in ASD diagnostic criteria might influence ADDM ASD prevalence estimates; therefore, most (85%) of the records used to determine prevalence estimates based on DSM-IV-TR criteria underwent additional review under a newly operationalized surveillance case definition for ASD consistent with the DSM-5 diagnostic criteria. Children meeting this new surveillance case definition could qualify on the basis of one or both of the following criteria, as documented in abstracted comprehensive evaluations: 1) behaviors consistent with the DSM-5 diagnostic features; and/or 2) an ASD diagnosis, whether based on DSM-IV-TR or DSM-5 diagnostic criteria. Stratified comparisons of the number of children meeting either of these two case definitions also are reported.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>For 2014, the overall prevalence of ASD among the 11 ADDM sites was 16.8 per 1,000 (one in 59) children aged 8 years. Overall ASD prevalence estimates varied among sites, from 13.1-29.3 per 1,000 children aged 8 years. ASD prevalence estimates also varied by sex and race/ethnicity. Males were four times more likely than females to be identified with ASD. Prevalence estimates were higher for non-Hispanic white (henceforth, white) children compared with non-Hispanic black (henceforth, black) children, and both groups were more likely to be identified with ASD compared with Hispanic children. Among the nine sites with sufficient data on intellectual ability, 31% of children with ASD were classified in the range of intellectual disability (intelligence quotient [IQ] <70), 25% were in the borderline range (IQ 71-85), and 44% had IQ scores in the average to above average range (i.e., IQ >85). The distribution of intellectual ability varied by sex and race/ethnicity. Although mention of developmental concerns by age 36 months was documented for 85% of children with ASD, only 42% had a comprehensive evaluation on record by age 36 months. The median age of earliest known ASD diagnosis was 52 months and did not differ significantly by sex or race/ethnicity. For the targeted comparison of DSM-IV-TR and DSM-5 results, the number and characteristics of children meeting the newly operationalized DSM-5 case definition for ASD were similar to those meeting the DSM-IV-TR case definition, with DSM-IV-TR case counts exceeding DSM-5 counts by less than 5% and approximately 86% overlap between the two case definitions (kappa = 0.85).</p><p><strong>Interpretation: </strong>Findings from the ADDM Network, on the basis of 2014 data reported from 11 sites, provide updated population-based estimates of the prevalence of ASD among children aged 8 years in multiple communities in the United States. The overall ASD prevalence estimate of 16.8 per 1,000 children aged 8 years in 2014 is higher than previously reported estimates from the ADDM Network. Because the ADDM sites do not provide a representative sample of the entire United States, the combined prevalence estimates presented in this report cannot be generalized to all children aged 8 years in the United States. Consistent with reports from previous ADDM surveillance years, findings from 2014 were marked by variation in ASD prevalence when stratified by geographic area, sex, and level of intellectual ability. Differences in prevalence estimates between black and white children have diminished in most sites, but remained notable for Hispanic children. For 2014, results from application of the DSM-IV-TR and DSM-5 case definitions were similar, overall and when stratified by sex, race/ethnicity, DSM-IV-TR diagnostic subtype, or level of intellectual ability.</p><p><strong>Public health action: </strong>Beginning with surveillance year 2016, the DSM-5 case definition will serve as the basis for ADDM estimates of ASD prevalence in future surveillance reports. Although the DSM-IV-TR case definition will eventually be phased out, it will be applied in a limited geographic area to offer additional data for comparison. Future analyses will examine trends in the continued use of DSM-IV-TR diagnoses, such as autistic disorder, PDD-NOS, and Asperger disorder in health and education records, documentation of symptoms consistent with DSM-5 terminology, and how these trends might influence estimates of ASD prevalence over time. The latest findings from the ADDM Network provide evidence that the prevalence of ASD is higher than previously reported estimates and continues to vary among certain racial/ethnic groups and communities. With prevalence of ASD ranging from 13.1 to 29.3 per 1,000 children aged 8 years in different communities throughout the United States, the need for behavioral, educational, residential, and occupational services remains high, as does the need for increased research on both genetic and nongenetic risk factors for ASD.</p>","PeriodicalId":48549,"journal":{"name":"Mmwr Surveillance Summaries","volume":"67 6","pages":"1-23"},"PeriodicalIF":37.3000,"publicationDate":"2018-04-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.15585/mmwr.ss6706a1","citationCount":"3288","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Prevalence of Autism Spectrum Disorder Among Children Aged 8 Years - Autism and Developmental Disabilities Monitoring Network, 11 Sites, United States, 2014.\",\"authors\":\"Jon Baio,&nbsp;Lisa Wiggins,&nbsp;Deborah L Christensen,&nbsp;Matthew J Maenner,&nbsp;Julie Daniels,&nbsp;Zachary Warren,&nbsp;Margaret Kurzius-Spencer,&nbsp;Walter Zahorodny,&nbsp;Cordelia Robinson Rosenberg,&nbsp;Tiffany White,&nbsp;Maureen S Durkin,&nbsp;Pamela Imm,&nbsp;Loizos Nikolaou,&nbsp;Marshalyn Yeargin-Allsopp,&nbsp;Li-Ching Lee,&nbsp;Rebecca Harrington,&nbsp;Maya Lopez,&nbsp;Robert T Fitzgerald,&nbsp;Amy Hewitt,&nbsp;Sydney Pettygrove,&nbsp;John N Constantino,&nbsp;Alison Vehorn,&nbsp;Josephine Shenouda,&nbsp;Jennifer Hall-Lande,&nbsp;Kim Van Naarden Braun,&nbsp;Nicole F Dowling\",\"doi\":\"10.15585/mmwr.ss6706a1\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><strong>Problem/condition: </strong>Autism spectrum disorder (ASD).</p><p><strong>Period covered: </strong>2014.</p><p><strong>Description of system: </strong>The Autism and Developmental Disabilities Monitoring (ADDM) Network is an active surveillance system that provides estimates of the prevalence of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) among children aged 8 years whose parents or guardians reside within 11 ADDM sites in the United States (Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Georgia, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, New Jersey, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Wisconsin). ADDM surveillance is conducted in two phases. The first phase involves review and abstraction of comprehensive evaluations that were completed by professional service providers in the community. Staff completing record review and abstraction receive extensive training and supervision and are evaluated according to strict reliability standards to certify effective initial training, identify ongoing training needs, and ensure adherence to the prescribed methodology. Record review and abstraction occurs in a variety of data sources ranging from general pediatric health clinics to specialized programs serving children with developmental disabilities. In addition, most of the ADDM sites also review records for children who have received special education services in public schools. In the second phase of the study, all abstracted information is reviewed systematically by experienced clinicians to determine ASD case status. 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引用次数: 3288

摘要

问题/状况:自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)。涵盖时间:2014年。系统描述:自闭症和发育障碍监测(ADDM)网络是一个主动监测系统,提供父母或监护人居住在美国11个ADDM站点(亚利桑那州、阿肯色州、科罗拉多州、佐治亚州、马里兰州、明尼苏达州、密苏里州、新泽西州、北卡罗来纳州、田纳西州和威斯康星州)的8岁儿童中自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)患病率的估计。ADDM监测分两个阶段进行。第一阶段涉及对社区专业服务提供者完成的综合评价进行审查和抽象化。完成记录审查和提取的员工接受广泛的培训和监督,并根据严格的可靠性标准进行评估,以证明有效的初始培训,确定正在进行的培训需求,并确保遵守规定的方法。记录审查和提取发生在各种数据源中,从普通儿科健康诊所到为发育障碍儿童服务的专门方案。此外,大多数ADDM网站还审查在公立学校接受过特殊教育服务的儿童的记录。在研究的第二阶段,由经验丰富的临床医生系统地审查所有抽象信息,以确定ASD病例的状态。如果一个儿童表现出符合《精神障碍诊断与统计手册》第四版文本修订版(DSM-IV-TR)自闭症诊断标准的行为,并由社区专业提供者完成的一项或多项综合评估,则该儿童被认为符合ASD监测病例定义;广泛性发育障碍(PDD-NOS,包括非典型自闭症);或者阿斯伯格综合症。本报告根据DSM-IV-TR标准,提供了2014年监测年度8岁儿童ASD患病率的最新估计,并描述了ASD儿童群体的特征。2013年,美国精神病学协会出版了《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第五版(DSM-5),对ASD的诊断标准进行了相当大的修改。ASD诊断标准的变化可能影响ADDM对ASD患病率的估计;因此,大多数(85%)用于确定基于DSM-IV-TR标准的患病率估计的记录在与DSM-5诊断标准一致的新实施的ASD监测病例定义下进行了额外的审查。符合这一新的监测病例定义的儿童可能符合以下一个或两个标准,如抽象综合评估所述:1)符合DSM-5诊断特征的行为;和/或2)基于DSM-IV-TR或DSM-5诊断标准的ASD诊断。报告还对符合这两种病例定义中的任何一种的儿童人数进行了分层比较。结果:2014年,在11个ADDM站点中,8岁儿童ASD的总体患病率为16.8 / 1000(1 / 59)。总体的ASD患病率估计因地区而异,从每1000名8岁儿童13.1-29.3人不等。ASD患病率估计也因性别和种族/民族而异。男性被诊断为自闭症谱系障碍的可能性是女性的四倍。与非西班牙裔黑人(从今往后,黑人)儿童相比,非西班牙裔白人(从今往后,白人)儿童的患病率估计更高,与西班牙裔儿童相比,两组儿童更容易被确诊为ASD。在9个有足够智力数据的网站中,31%的ASD儿童被归类为智力残疾(智商[IQ] 85)。智力的分布因性别和种族而异。尽管85%的ASD患儿在36个月大的时候提到了发育问题,但只有42%的患儿在36个月大的时候有全面的评估记录。已知最早ASD诊断的中位年龄为52个月,性别或种族/民族之间没有显著差异。对于DSM-IV-TR和DSM-5结果的针对性比较,符合新实施的DSM-5 ASD病例定义的儿童数量和特征与符合DSM-IV-TR病例定义的儿童数量和特征相似,DSM-IV-TR病例数超过DSM-5病例数不到5%,两种病例定义之间重叠约86% (kappa = 0.85)。解释:来自ADDM网络的研究结果基于2014年11个站点报告的数据,提供了美国多个社区中8岁儿童ASD患病率的最新基于人群的估计。总体ASD患病率估计为16。 2014年,每1000名8岁儿童中有8人死亡,高于ADDM网络此前报告的估计数。由于ADDM网站没有提供整个美国的代表性样本,本报告中提出的综合患病率估计不能推广到美国所有8岁儿童。与之前ADDM监测年的报告一致,2014年的调查结果显示,按地理区域、性别和智力水平分层的ASD患病率存在差异。在大多数地区,黑人和白人儿童之间的患病率估计差异已经缩小,但在西班牙裔儿童中仍然明显。2014年,应用DSM-IV-TR和DSM-5病例定义的结果总体上是相似的,当按性别、种族/民族、DSM-IV-TR诊断亚型或智力水平分层时。公共卫生行动:从2016年监测年开始,DSM-5病例定义将作为未来监测报告中ADDM估计ASD患病率的基础。尽管DSM-IV-TR病例定义最终将被淘汰,但它将在有限的地理区域内应用,以提供额外的比较数据。未来的分析将研究继续使用DSM-IV-TR诊断的趋势,如健康和教育记录中的自闭症、PDD-NOS和阿斯伯格障碍,与DSM-5术语一致的症状记录,以及这些趋势如何影响随着时间的推移对ASD患病率的估计。来自ADDM网络的最新发现提供了证据,表明自闭症谱系障碍的患病率高于先前报道的估计,并且在某些种族/民族群体和社区中继续存在差异。在美国不同的社区,每1000名8岁儿童中,自闭症的患病率从13.1到29.3不等,对行为、教育、居住和职业服务的需求仍然很高,对自闭症的遗传和非遗传风险因素的研究也需要增加。
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Prevalence of Autism Spectrum Disorder Among Children Aged 8 Years - Autism and Developmental Disabilities Monitoring Network, 11 Sites, United States, 2014.

Problem/condition: Autism spectrum disorder (ASD).

Period covered: 2014.

Description of system: The Autism and Developmental Disabilities Monitoring (ADDM) Network is an active surveillance system that provides estimates of the prevalence of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) among children aged 8 years whose parents or guardians reside within 11 ADDM sites in the United States (Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Georgia, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, New Jersey, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Wisconsin). ADDM surveillance is conducted in two phases. The first phase involves review and abstraction of comprehensive evaluations that were completed by professional service providers in the community. Staff completing record review and abstraction receive extensive training and supervision and are evaluated according to strict reliability standards to certify effective initial training, identify ongoing training needs, and ensure adherence to the prescribed methodology. Record review and abstraction occurs in a variety of data sources ranging from general pediatric health clinics to specialized programs serving children with developmental disabilities. In addition, most of the ADDM sites also review records for children who have received special education services in public schools. In the second phase of the study, all abstracted information is reviewed systematically by experienced clinicians to determine ASD case status. A child is considered to meet the surveillance case definition for ASD if he or she displays behaviors, as described on one or more comprehensive evaluations completed by community-based professional providers, consistent with the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, Text Revision (DSM-IV-TR) diagnostic criteria for autistic disorder; pervasive developmental disorder-not otherwise specified (PDD-NOS, including atypical autism); or Asperger disorder. This report provides updated ASD prevalence estimates for children aged 8 years during the 2014 surveillance year, on the basis of DSM-IV-TR criteria, and describes characteristics of the population of children with ASD. In 2013, the American Psychiatric Association published the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5), which made considerable changes to ASD diagnostic criteria. The change in ASD diagnostic criteria might influence ADDM ASD prevalence estimates; therefore, most (85%) of the records used to determine prevalence estimates based on DSM-IV-TR criteria underwent additional review under a newly operationalized surveillance case definition for ASD consistent with the DSM-5 diagnostic criteria. Children meeting this new surveillance case definition could qualify on the basis of one or both of the following criteria, as documented in abstracted comprehensive evaluations: 1) behaviors consistent with the DSM-5 diagnostic features; and/or 2) an ASD diagnosis, whether based on DSM-IV-TR or DSM-5 diagnostic criteria. Stratified comparisons of the number of children meeting either of these two case definitions also are reported.

Results: For 2014, the overall prevalence of ASD among the 11 ADDM sites was 16.8 per 1,000 (one in 59) children aged 8 years. Overall ASD prevalence estimates varied among sites, from 13.1-29.3 per 1,000 children aged 8 years. ASD prevalence estimates also varied by sex and race/ethnicity. Males were four times more likely than females to be identified with ASD. Prevalence estimates were higher for non-Hispanic white (henceforth, white) children compared with non-Hispanic black (henceforth, black) children, and both groups were more likely to be identified with ASD compared with Hispanic children. Among the nine sites with sufficient data on intellectual ability, 31% of children with ASD were classified in the range of intellectual disability (intelligence quotient [IQ] <70), 25% were in the borderline range (IQ 71-85), and 44% had IQ scores in the average to above average range (i.e., IQ >85). The distribution of intellectual ability varied by sex and race/ethnicity. Although mention of developmental concerns by age 36 months was documented for 85% of children with ASD, only 42% had a comprehensive evaluation on record by age 36 months. The median age of earliest known ASD diagnosis was 52 months and did not differ significantly by sex or race/ethnicity. For the targeted comparison of DSM-IV-TR and DSM-5 results, the number and characteristics of children meeting the newly operationalized DSM-5 case definition for ASD were similar to those meeting the DSM-IV-TR case definition, with DSM-IV-TR case counts exceeding DSM-5 counts by less than 5% and approximately 86% overlap between the two case definitions (kappa = 0.85).

Interpretation: Findings from the ADDM Network, on the basis of 2014 data reported from 11 sites, provide updated population-based estimates of the prevalence of ASD among children aged 8 years in multiple communities in the United States. The overall ASD prevalence estimate of 16.8 per 1,000 children aged 8 years in 2014 is higher than previously reported estimates from the ADDM Network. Because the ADDM sites do not provide a representative sample of the entire United States, the combined prevalence estimates presented in this report cannot be generalized to all children aged 8 years in the United States. Consistent with reports from previous ADDM surveillance years, findings from 2014 were marked by variation in ASD prevalence when stratified by geographic area, sex, and level of intellectual ability. Differences in prevalence estimates between black and white children have diminished in most sites, but remained notable for Hispanic children. For 2014, results from application of the DSM-IV-TR and DSM-5 case definitions were similar, overall and when stratified by sex, race/ethnicity, DSM-IV-TR diagnostic subtype, or level of intellectual ability.

Public health action: Beginning with surveillance year 2016, the DSM-5 case definition will serve as the basis for ADDM estimates of ASD prevalence in future surveillance reports. Although the DSM-IV-TR case definition will eventually be phased out, it will be applied in a limited geographic area to offer additional data for comparison. Future analyses will examine trends in the continued use of DSM-IV-TR diagnoses, such as autistic disorder, PDD-NOS, and Asperger disorder in health and education records, documentation of symptoms consistent with DSM-5 terminology, and how these trends might influence estimates of ASD prevalence over time. The latest findings from the ADDM Network provide evidence that the prevalence of ASD is higher than previously reported estimates and continues to vary among certain racial/ethnic groups and communities. With prevalence of ASD ranging from 13.1 to 29.3 per 1,000 children aged 8 years in different communities throughout the United States, the need for behavioral, educational, residential, and occupational services remains high, as does the need for increased research on both genetic and nongenetic risk factors for ASD.

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来源期刊
Mmwr Surveillance Summaries
Mmwr Surveillance Summaries PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
60.50
自引率
1.20%
发文量
9
期刊介绍: The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) Series, produced by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), is commonly referred to as "the voice of CDC." Serving as the primary outlet for timely, reliable, authoritative, accurate, objective, and practical public health information and recommendations, the MMWR is a crucial publication. Its readership primarily includes physicians, nurses, public health practitioners, epidemiologists, scientists, researchers, educators, and laboratorians.
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