儿童自闭症沟通治疗(PACT)与自闭症儿童的常规管理:丹麦实用的、全国性的、随机临床试验的协议:DAN-PACT

IF 2 4区 医学 Q3 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL
Trials Pub Date : 2025-08-29 DOI:10.1186/s13063-025-09017-z
Sonja Martha Teresa Ziegler, Pia Jeppesen, Jens Christiansen, Charlotte Engberg Conrad, Kirstine Agnete Davidsen, Georgij Engkjær-Trautwein, Janus Engstrøm, Birgitte Fagerlund, Martin Vestergaard Gøtzsche, Lene Halling Hastrup, Janus Christian Jakobsen, Anne Mette Kirk, Marlene Birciet Lauritsen, Anne Katrine Pagsberg, Mette Agner Pedersen, Tina Røndrup Kilburn, Per Hove Thomsen, Manon Varenne, Niels Bilenberg
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:尽管自闭症是一种影响全球约2%儿童和青少年的终身发育疾病,但旨在改善自闭症核心特征的干预措施却很少。儿童自闭症沟通治疗(PACT)是在自然环境中提供的首批父母介导的发育干预措施之一,在核心特征改善方面显示出有希望的结果。方法:DAN-PACT是一项由研究者发起、独立资助、多中心、平行组优势、随机临床试验,旨在评估PACT在2.0-6.9岁新近诊断为自闭症的儿童中的益处和危害,比较PACT联合常规管理与单独常规管理。来自丹麦所有地区的280名自闭症儿童将被包括在内。主要结果评估者、数据管理者、统计学家和结论撰写者将采用盲法。主要结果是自闭症特征的大小,由ADOS-2 CSS测量。样本量的计算基于0.66分的最小重要差,对应于ADOS原始分数的2-3分差。次要结果是用BOSCC测量的儿童社会沟通技能的变化,用VABS-3测量的儿童适应技能的变化,以及父母对自己和孩子生活质量的评估。将评估几个探索性结果,包括试验期间的不良事件。试验工作人员将接受培训,以便像往常一样执行PACT和加强管理,评估PACT的人工保真度,并通过重复测量来衡量广泛的利弊。讨论:DAN-PACT旨在最大限度地降低偏倚风险,将试验固定在自然的临床环境中,并扩大以前PACT研究中使用的结果测量范围,通过对所有观察结果进行盲定评分,包括大量年轻自闭症儿童样本,并使用强化管理作为常规对照样本。试验的局限性是有丢失数据的风险,不能使父母参与者不知道他们的分组分配和他们对几个次要和探索性结果的评价。此外,对于ADOS-2 CSS或BOSCC的最小重要差异的大小没有达成共识,因此这是实用的估计。试验注册:ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05673096。注册于2022年12月22日。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Paediatric Autism Communication Therapy (PACT) versus management as usual in autistic children: a protocol for a Danish pragmatic, national, randomised clinical trial: DAN-PACT.

Background: Despite autism being a lifelong developmental condition affecting approximately 2% of children and young people worldwide, interventions aimed at improving core autism features are sparse. Paediatric Autism Communication Therapy (PACT) is among the first parent-mediated developmental interventions, provided in naturalistic settings, to show promising results in core feature improvement.

Methods: DAN-PACT is an investigator-initiated, independently funded, multicentre, parallel group superiority, randomised clinical trial, which aims to assess benefits and harms of PACT in 2.0-6.9-year-old children with a recent autism diagnosis, comparing PACT combined with management as usual to management as usual alone. Two hundred eighty autistic children from all regions of Denmark will be included. Primary outcome assessors, data managers, statisticians, and conclusion drawers will be blinded. The primary outcome is magnitude of autism features as measured by the ADOS-2 CSS. The sample size calculation is based on a minimal important difference of 0.66 points, corresponding to a 2-3-point difference in ADOS raw scores. Secondary outcomes are changes in child social communication skills measured with the BOSCC, child adaptive skills measured with the VABS-3, and parents' assessment of their own and their child's quality of life. Several exploratory outcomes will be assessed, including adverse events during the trial period. Trial staff will be trained to perform both PACT and enhanced management as usual, assessing manual fidelity of PACT and measuring a broad range of benefits and harms with repeated measures.

Discussion: DAN-PACT aims to minimise risks of bias, anchor the trial in a naturalistic clinical setting, and extend the scope of outcome measures used in previous PACT studies, achieved by blinding raters to all observational outcomes, including a large sample of young autistic children, and using an enhanced management as usual control sample. Trial limitations are the risk of missing data and the inability to blind parent participants to their group allocation and their rating of several secondary and exploratory outcomes. In addition, there is no consensus on the magnitude of the minimal important difference on ADOS-2 CSS or BOSCC, which are therefore estimated pragmatically.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05673096. Registered on December 22, 2022.

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来源期刊
Trials
Trials 医学-医学:研究与实验
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
4.00%
发文量
966
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: Trials is an open access, peer-reviewed, online journal that will encompass all aspects of the performance and findings of randomized controlled trials. Trials will experiment with, and then refine, innovative approaches to improving communication about trials. We are keen to move beyond publishing traditional trial results articles (although these will be included). We believe this represents an exciting opportunity to advance the science and reporting of trials. Prior to 2006, Trials was published as Current Controlled Trials in Cardiovascular Medicine (CCTCVM). All published CCTCVM articles are available via the Trials website and citations to CCTCVM article URLs will continue to be supported.
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