弥合差距:利用来自四个国家的汇总数据进行网络分析,揭示自闭症儿童和青少年的自闭症和焦虑症状之间的关键联系。

IF 5 3区 医学 Q1 PEDIATRICS
Anat Zaidman-Zait, Matthew J Hollocks, Connor M Kerns, Iliana Magiati, Alana J McVey, Isabel M Smith, Rachael Bedford, Teresa Bennett, Eric Duku, Stelios Georgiades, Annie Richard, Tracy Vaillancourt, Lonnie Zwaigenbaum, Antonio Hardan, Robin Libove, Jacqui Rodgers, Mikle South, Emily Simonoff, Amy Van Hecke, Mirko Uljarević, Peter Szatmari
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:自闭症儿童的焦虑率明显高于非自闭症儿童。在这一人群中,自闭症特征和焦虑症状之间的确切关系尚不清楚。以前的工作探索了领域层面的关联,涉及检查广泛的类别或症状集群,而不是特定症状和/或个体特征之间的关系。我们通过采用网络方法来理解自闭症特征和焦虑症状的共同结构,从而解决了这一差距。方法:收集来自加拿大、新加坡、英国和美国的5项研究的数据,共623名自闭症儿童(女性17%,6-18岁),使用家长报告Spence儿童焦虑量表(SCAS-P)。我们首先从SCAS-P项目中推导出两个无向正则化网络,然后通过添加与社会沟通、高度集中和重复行为以及感觉超敏感相关的自闭症特征。从这些模型的度量中,我们提取了节点的可预测性、关键桥接节点和社区检测。结果:焦虑网络高度连接,由四个关键集群组成:一般焦虑、社交焦虑、分离焦虑和恐慌/广场恐怖。这些与基于DSM-IV-TR标准的现有SCAS-P结构大致一致。在自闭症-焦虑网络中,焦虑的结构基本保持稳定,自闭症特征形成了自己的社区。对可预测性(即千篇一律)的偏好和感觉超敏反应是主要通过广泛性焦虑将自闭症特征与焦虑症状联系起来的关键节点。结论:本研究确定了一些关键特征,这些特征连接了自闭症特征和焦虑症状之间广泛独立的结构。这些发现将在指导自闭症患者焦虑的评估、预防和治疗的背景下进行讨论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Bridging the gap: unveiling key links between autism and anxiety symptoms in autistic children and youth using a network analysis in pooled data from four countries.

Background: Autistic children experience significantly higher rates of anxiety compared to nonautistic children. The precise relations between autism characteristics and anxiety symptoms remain unclear in this population. Previous work has explored associations at the domain level, which involve examining broad categories or clusters of symptoms, rather than the relationships between specific symptoms and/or individual characteristics. We addressed this gap by taking a network approach to understand the shared structure of autism characteristics and anxiety symptoms.

Method: Data were pooled from five studies from Canada, Singapore, the UK, and the USA, totaling 623 autistic children (17% female sex; aged 6-18 years), for whom the parent-report Spence Children's Anxiety Scale (SCAS-P) was available. We derived two undirected regularized networks, first from the SCAS-P items only, and then by adding autism characteristics pertaining to social communication, highly focused and repetitive behavior, and sensory hypersensitivity. From these models' metrics, we extracted nodes' predictability, key bridging nodes, and community detection.

Results: The anxiety-only network was highly connected and consisted of four key clusters: General Anxiety, Social Anxiety, Separation Anxiety, and Panic/Agoraphobia. These broadly aligned with the existing SCAS-P structure based on DSM-IV-TR criteria. In the autism-anxiety network, the structure of anxiety remained mostly stable, with autism features forming their own community. Preference for predictability (i.e., sameness) and sensory hypersensitivity were key nodes that linked autistic features and anxiety symptoms, primarily through generalized anxiety.

Conclusion: This study identified some of the key characteristics that bridge the broadly independent structures of autism characteristics and anxiety symptoms. The findings are discussed in the context of guiding the assessment, prevention, and treatment of anxiety in autism.

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来源期刊
Child and Adolescent Mental Health
Child and Adolescent Mental Health PEDIATRICS-PSYCHIATRY
CiteScore
8.30
自引率
3.30%
发文量
77
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Child and Adolescent Mental Health (CAMH) publishes high quality, peer-reviewed child and adolescent mental health services research of relevance to academics, clinicians and commissioners internationally. The journal''s principal aim is to foster evidence-based clinical practice and clinically orientated research among clinicians and health services researchers working with children and adolescents, parents and their families in relation to or with a particular interest in mental health. CAMH publishes reviews, original articles, and pilot reports of innovative approaches, interventions, clinical methods and service developments. The journal has regular sections on Measurement Issues, Innovations in Practice, Global Child Mental Health and Humanities. All published papers should be of direct relevance to mental health practitioners and clearly draw out clinical implications for the field.
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