The Effects of Caregiver Training on DTTC Treatment Outcomes in CAS
NCT ID: NCT05916222
Last Updated: 2026-01-20
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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RECRUITING
NA
40 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2023-07-19
2026-12-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Children in the Direct Training Group will receive DTTC treatment during one half of each session administered only by the SLP, while the caregiver observes. DTTC will be administered by the caregiver with direct coaching by the speech language pathologist (SLP) in the other half of the session. Children in the Indirect Training Group will only receive DTTC treatment administered by the SLP, while the caregiver observes. In both groups, caregivers will review home practice guidelines with the clinician at the end of each therapy session, and engage in home practice with their children. Home practice will consist of 30-minute practice sessions 3x/week during the 8-week treatment phase and 6x/week during the 4-week follow-up phase. Caregivers in the Direct Training Group will be provided specific guidance regarding practice techniques, whereas caregivers in the Indirect Training Group will only be provided treatment words to be practiced at home and instructed to apply what they have observed during SLP-administered DTTC.
Probe data will be collected during the Pre-Treatment, Treatment and Follow-Up phases. The study duration is 16 weeks in total duration, for all participants. Probe words will consist of 20 potential treated items to evaluate treatment gains and 30 generalization items to assess carryover of treatment gains to untreated words.
The study will address the following aims:
Aim 1: Quantify the effects of direct vs. indirect caregiver training during a period of DTTC combined with home practice on whole word accuracy in treated and generalization probes at post-treatment and maintenance.
Aim 2: Quantify the effects of direct vs. indirect caregiver training during a period of DTTC combined with home practice on phoneme accuracy in treated words and generalization probes at post-treatment and maintenance.
Aim 3: Quantify the effects of direct vs. indirect caregiver training during a period of DTTC combined with home practice on speech intelligibility at post-treatment and maintenance.
Aim 4: Quantify the effects of direct vs. indirect caregiver training during a period of DTTC combined with home practice on functional communication at post-treatment and maintenance.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Indirect Training (DTTC + Home Practice)
Children in the Indirect Training Arm will receive DTTC treatment 2x/week administered by an SLP for 8 weeks. Parent/caregivers in this Arm will complete an online, self-paced educational module on CAS prior to the start of treatment, observe all treatment sessions, and review home practice guidelines with the clinician at the end of each therapy session. Parent/caregivers will engage their children in home practice during the treatment phase and follow-up phase. Home practice will consist of 30-minute practice sessions 3x/week during the 8-week treatment phase and 6x/week during the 4-week follow-up phase.
Dynamic Temporal and Tactile Cueing (DTTC)
DTTC is a motor-based intervention where the client watches, listens to and imitates the clinician (Strand, 2020). Treatment follows a temporal hierarchy where children receive multisensory cueing to establish accurate movements. First, the child imitates the clinician's production. If inaccurate, the child simultaneously produces the target with the clinician while cueing is provided. Upon achieving accuracy within simultaneous productions, the target is practiced within direct imitation while the clinician adds/fades cues based on the child's productions. When the child accurately produces the target in direct imitation, the target is practiced with varied prosody. Next, the target is practiced within delayed imitation where a child produces a word following a 2-3 second delay after the clinician's production. Upon accurately producing the target at all levels, the word is practiced within spontaneous productions.
Direct Training (DTTC + Coaching + Home Practice)
Children in the Direct Training Arm will receive DTTC treatment 2x/week for 8 weeks with half of each session administered only by the SLP. In the other half of the session, DTTC will be administered by the parent/caregiver with online coaching by the SLP. During the coaching portion of treatment sessions, the SLP will provide direct training to guide the parent/caregiver in the administration of DTTC to support home practice sessions. Parent/caregivers in this Arm will also complete an online, self-paced educational module on CAS prior to the start of treatment and review home practice guidelines with the clinician at the end of each therapy session. Parent/caregivers will engage their children in home practice during the treatment phase and follow-up phase. Home practice will consist of 30-minute practice sessions 3x/week during the 8-week treatment phase and 6x/week during the 4-week follow-up phase.
Dynamic Temporal and Tactile Cueing (DTTC)
DTTC is a motor-based intervention where the client watches, listens to and imitates the clinician (Strand, 2020). Treatment follows a temporal hierarchy where children receive multisensory cueing to establish accurate movements. First, the child imitates the clinician's production. If inaccurate, the child simultaneously produces the target with the clinician while cueing is provided. Upon achieving accuracy within simultaneous productions, the target is practiced within direct imitation while the clinician adds/fades cues based on the child's productions. When the child accurately produces the target in direct imitation, the target is practiced with varied prosody. Next, the target is practiced within delayed imitation where a child produces a word following a 2-3 second delay after the clinician's production. Upon accurately producing the target at all levels, the word is practiced within spontaneous productions.
Interventions
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Dynamic Temporal and Tactile Cueing (DTTC)
DTTC is a motor-based intervention where the client watches, listens to and imitates the clinician (Strand, 2020). Treatment follows a temporal hierarchy where children receive multisensory cueing to establish accurate movements. First, the child imitates the clinician's production. If inaccurate, the child simultaneously produces the target with the clinician while cueing is provided. Upon achieving accuracy within simultaneous productions, the target is practiced within direct imitation while the clinician adds/fades cues based on the child's productions. When the child accurately produces the target in direct imitation, the target is practiced with varied prosody. Next, the target is practiced within delayed imitation where a child produces a word following a 2-3 second delay after the clinician's production. Upon accurately producing the target at all levels, the word is practiced within spontaneous productions.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. English as the primary and preferred language
3. Primary speech diagnosis of CAS based on auditory-perceptual, expert diagnosis and/or Dynamic Evaluation of Motor Speech Skills (DEMSS) score classification of "significant evidence of CAS" with score \<323
Exclusion Criteria
2. Primary diagnosis of dysarthria or other speech sound disorder (e.g., phonological impairment).
3. Oral structural anomalies
4. Hearing impairment
5. Uncorrected visual impairment
6. Receiving speech treatment elsewhere during the period of the study. Language or Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) treatment is permitted.
7. Receptive Language Index standard score less than 70 on the Receptive-Expressive Emergent Language Test - 4th Edition (REEL-4), Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals - Preschool 3rd Edition (CELF-P3), or Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals - 5th Edition (CELF-5), as appropriate for participant's age.
8. Cognitive standard score less than 70 on the Developmental Assessment of Young Children (DAYC) - ages 2;0 - 5;11, Nonverbal Index of Reynolds Intellectual Assessment Scales - 2nd Edition - age 6;0 - 7;11
24 Months
95 Months
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Hofstra University
OTHER
New York University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Locations
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Hofstra University
Hempstead, New York, United States
New York University
New York, New York, United States
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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References
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Strand EA. Dynamic Temporal and Tactile Cueing: A Treatment Strategy for Childhood Apraxia of Speech. Am J Speech Lang Pathol. 2020 Feb 7;29(1):30-48. doi: 10.1044/2019_AJSLP-19-0005. Epub 2019 Dec 17.
Case J, Wang EW, Grigos MI. The Multilevel Word Accuracy Composite Scale: A Novel Measure of Speech Production in Childhood Apraxia of Speech. Am J Speech Lang Pathol. 2023 Aug 17;32(4S):1866-1883. doi: 10.1044/2023_AJSLP-22-00166. Epub 2023 May 17.
McLeod S, Harrison LJ, McCormack J. The intelligibility in Context Scale: validity and reliability of a subjective rating measure. J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2012 Apr;55(2):648-56. doi: 10.1044/1092-4388(2011/10-0130). Epub 2012 Jan 3.
Thomas-Stonell N, Washington K, Oddson B, Robertson B, Rosenbaum P. Measuring communicative participation using the FOCUS(c): Focus on the Outcomes of Communication Under Six. Child Care Health Dev. 2013 Jul;39(4):474-80. doi: 10.1111/cch.12049.
Other Identifiers
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A22-0040-001
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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