Study Results
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Basic Information
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RECRUITING
NA
132 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2023-02-13
2028-05-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Child Predictors to Treatment Response. The investigators will explore if child variables (i.e., receptive language, nonverbal intelligence, and peer engagement) assessed at baseline predict peer-directed communication gains in response to first stage PMI after 5 weeks (10 sessions) of treatment and adapted PMI treatments after 12 weeks (24 sessions) of treatment for all children regardless of condition, as described in the Statistical Design plan. Fidelity Procedures. Treatment fidelity will be monitored for (1) adult implementation of peer training, (2) peer implementation with focal child, and (3) staff implementation of steps for each PMI condition. To monitor adherence to the treatment protocol and identify peers or implementers who may need more support, fidelity will be collected for 25% of randomly selected treatment sessions in all treatment stages. If a peer or implementer falls below 70% fidelity over two sessions, a 20-min refresher session will be provided. Coding Communication Variables. All peer-directed communication and engagement variables will be primary coded from videos at the KU research lab to minimize potential site differences, using Noldus Observer XT software. Two-to-three KU research assistants will be primary coders and deemed reliable after achieving 80% inter-rater reliability with the PI or project coordinator (PC) on a minimum of three gold standard vignettes across child initiations and responses, communicative functions and modalities, and reciprocal exchanges; student assistants will be kept blind to condition and code 30% of sessions for reliability. Noldus data for expressive language acts will be summarized to determine changes in total number of different words, mean length of utterance, and unique word combinations. During Week 5, coding of child communication to determine responder status will occur within three days for timely decision-making to re-randomize children to second stage treatment. Training on CGI-I. Drs. Scahill and Boyd trained independent evaluators (IEs) at each site on the CGI-I and Parent Target Problem narratives using clinical vignettes during Year 1. For Years 2-5, Dr. Luc Lecavalier will continue as consultant on CGI-I training. This will include presentation of clinical vignettes to illustrate interpretation of frequency counts of spontaneous peer-directed communication, PTP narratives and scores on the Aberrant Behavior Checklist (ABC) subscales (Irritability, Social Withdrawal, Hyperactivity) rated by the child's teacher. Given that the CGI-I is a key secondary measure, the investigators will set rigorous standards for agreement with gold standard ratings established by Drs. Scahill and Boyd (perfect agreement on 3 and within one unit on the fourth). The CGI-I resolves to a dichotomous outcome: positive (Much Improved or Very Much Improved) or negative response (all other ratings). Therefore, a disagreement by one unit on the CGI-I is acceptable if it would not affect classification on treatment response. An IE who does not meet reliability criteria will receive additional training and given additional vignettes to achieve reliability. Following training to reliability, Dr. Lecavalier will review the PTP baseline narratives for the first 3 subjects at each site and provide feedback to the IE. Consultants will convene to review sessions at all data collection time points. On a rotating basis, IEs will present the CGI-I scores on completed cases, as well as the clinical material that formed the basis of the CGI-I ratings. The purpose of these review sessions is to foster a common approach to scoring the CGI-I, and reliability across sites.
Interobserver Agreement. The KU project coordinator will train two research assistants (RAs) kept blind to treatment condition, to a criterion of 80% interobserver agreement for all primary and secondary child outcome variables using the gold standard videos created to train primary coders. The RAs will be considered reliable once they meet 80% interobserver reliability across variables on three different videos. A minimum of 30% of videos will be randomly selected for reliability coding from each of the four measurement periods, for both research sites.
Data Analyses. A series of multilevel models with occasions nested within children will be used to compare changes in peer-directed communication and other language outcomes from baseline to Week 5 (or 10 sessions) in children randomly assigned to the SPT Basic condition with changes in children assigned to the SPT Plus condition (Aim 1a). The investigators will also compare changes in outcomes over the 12 week (or 24 sessions) two-stage intervention for non-responders in each of the four adaptive interventions. Planned pairwise comparisons will enable us to examine which condition/s were most effective at eliciting a treatment response (Aim 1b). Because the investigators are especially interested in the impact of SPT Plus, the investigators will determine whether experiencing that intervention - regardless of the stage - has an impact on intercepts or slopes for child communication and language outcomes. Finally, the investigators will use t-tests to compare baseline predictor variable levels for children identified as early responders or slow responders at Week 5. The investigators will also determine if early and slow responders at Week 12, the end of intervention, differ in baseline predictor characteristics. The second way the investigators will evaluate the predictor variables is to determine if any of them are related to intercept and slopes when treatment group is not a part of the model. More details about the modeling process and a basic equation are provided in the Statistical Design and Power data analysis plan.
Missing data and Power. Maximum likelihood estimation will be used to include all available data in a multidimensional likelihood function such that no imputation will be needed. Power simulation conducted within SAS indicates that there is ample power for the models to be conducted in Aims 1a, 1c, and 2. While Aim 1b is more limited in power, the parameter estimates obtained from these models are crucial for taking the next steps in developing adaptive interventions for this population. Power curves are provided in the data plan.
Potential Problems and Strategies. It is possible that some preschool-age peers may have difficulty implementing procedures with adequate fidelity. The investigators are confident that our comprehensive peer recruitment criteria, prior peer implementation fidelity average of 80% (based on fidelity data from 235 treatment sessions), and using similar procedures to provide booster training as necessary all support the feasibility of the planned peer training component. It is possible that some children with ASD will attend the same preschool. If this occurs, the investigators will ensure that school staff do not discuss what condition they are in and implement treatment in different locations. Joint lab meetings will be conducted twice per month, with close monitoring of treatment conditions to ensure a high-level of implementation fidelity for adults and peers. The PI will monitor data collection and entry to ensure it is aggregated consistently across sites.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
SEQUENTIAL
TREATMENT
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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Stay-Play_Talk Basic Followed by Stay_Play_Talk Basic - (SPT Basic Responders)
After being randomly assigned to the SPT Basic condition, these participants responded and therefore remained in this condition
Stay-Play-Talk Basic
Stay-Play-Talk (SPT) Basic and SGD with augmented peer input in which peers are taught to model verbal responses while simultaneously selecting screen icons with spoken peer input only (i.e., peers taught to model language)
Stay_Play_Talk Basic Followed by Randomization to Stay_Play_Talk Basic (SPT Basic - SPT BASIC)
After being randomly assigned to the SPT Basic condition, these participants did not respond but were randomized to stay in this condition to examine longer duration in this treatment.
Stay-Play-Talk Basic
Stay-Play-Talk (SPT) Basic and SGD with augmented peer input in which peers are taught to model verbal responses while simultaneously selecting screen icons with spoken peer input only (i.e., peers taught to model language)
Stay_Play_Talk Basic Followed by Randomization to Stay_Play_Talk Plus (SPT Basic - SPT Plus)
After being randomly assigned to the SPT Basic condition, these participants did not respond and were randomized to Stay\_Play\_Talk Plus in the second stage.
Stay-Play-Talk Basic
Stay-Play-Talk (SPT) Basic and SGD with augmented peer input in which peers are taught to model verbal responses while simultaneously selecting screen icons with spoken peer input only (i.e., peers taught to model language)
Stay-Play-Talk Plus
SPT Plus with augmented SGD peer input (i.e., peers taught to use verbal language models concurrently while selecting SGD icons).
Stay_Play_Talk Plus Followed by Stay_Play_Talk Plus (SPT Plus Responders)
After being randomly assigned to the SPT Plus condition, these participants responded and therefore remained in this condition
Stay-Play-Talk Plus
SPT Plus with augmented SGD peer input (i.e., peers taught to use verbal language models concurrently while selecting SGD icons).
Stay_Play_Talk Plus Followed by Randomization to Stay_Play_Talk Plus (SPT Plus - SPT Plus)
After being randomly assigned to the SPT Plus condition, these participants did not respond and were randomized to Stay\_Play\_Talk Plus in the second stage.
Stay-Play-Talk Plus
SPT Plus with augmented SGD peer input (i.e., peers taught to use verbal language models concurrently while selecting SGD icons).
Stay_Play_Talk Plus Followed by Randomization to Stay_Play_Talk Advanced (SPT Plus - SPT Advanced)
After being randomly assigned to the SPT Plus condition, these participants did not respond and were randomized to Stay\_Play\_Talk Advanced condition in the second stage which incorporates direct instruction.
Stay-Play-Talk Plus
SPT Plus with augmented SGD peer input (i.e., peers taught to use verbal language models concurrently while selecting SGD icons).
Stay-Play-Talk Advanced
SPT Advanced adds direct instruction strategies for the children with ASD (i.e., adult prompts, reinforcers, and embedded teaching trials) to increase peer-directed communication.
Interventions
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Stay-Play-Talk Basic
Stay-Play-Talk (SPT) Basic and SGD with augmented peer input in which peers are taught to model verbal responses while simultaneously selecting screen icons with spoken peer input only (i.e., peers taught to model language)
Stay-Play-Talk Plus
SPT Plus with augmented SGD peer input (i.e., peers taught to use verbal language models concurrently while selecting SGD icons).
Stay-Play-Talk Advanced
SPT Advanced adds direct instruction strategies for the children with ASD (i.e., adult prompts, reinforcers, and embedded teaching trials) to increase peer-directed communication.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* limited or no spoken language defined by less than 20 functional, spontaneous words
* currently using or a candidate for a speech-generating device
* access to peers without disabilities
* English as the primary language spoken at home
Exclusion Criteria
* significant physical, sensory, or motor impairments that would prevent playing with another child
* uncorrected visual or hearing impairments that would cause difficulty following peer instructions
* a lack of symbol discrimination skills
3 Years
6 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University of North Carolina
OTHER
University of Kansas
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Locations
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Juniper Gardens Children's Project
Kansas City, Kansas, United States
University of North Carolina
Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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00149051
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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