From screening to diagnosis to treatment
“Autism screen approaches vary but with educational efforts on the part of the AAP, CDC, and family organizations the rates for autism screening have dramatically improved,” said Susan L. Hyman, MD, professor of pediatrics at the University of Rochester in New York. “I do not know if screening rates have been impacted by COVID.”
Dr. Hyman and coauthors wrote an AAP clinical report on the identification, evaluation, and management of children with autism spectrum disorder. The report was published in the January 2020 issue of Pediatrics.
After screening and diagnostic testing, patients most importantly need to be able to access “timely and equitable evidence-based intervention,” which should be available, said Dr. Hyman.
Although researchers have proposed training primary care providers in autism diagnostics, “older, more complex patients with co-occurring behavioral health or other developmental disorders may need more specialized diagnostic assessment than could be accomplished in a primary care setting,” Dr. Hyman added.
“However, it is very important to identify children with therapeutic needs as early as possible and move them through the continuum from screening to diagnosis to treatment in a timely fashion. It would be wonderful if symptoms could be addressed without the need for diagnosis in the very youngest children,” Dr. Hyman said. “Early symptoms, even if not autism, are likely to be appropriate for intervention – whether it is speech therapy, attention to food selectivity, sleep problems – things that impact quality of life and potential future symptoms.”
The research was supported by the Utah Stimulating Access to Research in Residency Transition Scholar award, which is funded by the National Institutes of Health.
Dr. Campbell is an inventor on a patent related to screening for autism. The study authors otherwise had no disclosures. Dr. Lessin is on the editorial advisory board for Pediatric News and is on an advisory board for Cognoa, which is developing a medical device to diagnose autism and he is also the co-editor of the AAP's current ADHD Toolkit. Dr. Hyman had no relevant financial disclosures.
*This story was updated on Feb. 11, 2021.