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Loss of autism diagnosis and symptoms achievable, with caveats

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Nonoptimal outcomes are not failures

This is an important paper that, like all others, needs replication, and there is reasonably strong evidence that early detection and intervention have led, on balance, to significant improvements in outcome, said Dr. Fred Volkmar.

There are, however, complexities associated with understanding the word "cure." It is important to realize that a range of outcomes is possible, and we sometimes don’t have a good sense until adolescence of how well a person will do. Sadly, even with good programs and for reasons we don’t understand, the degree of improvement is not what we want.

Yet lesser improvement should not be regarded as "failure," noted Dr. Sally Ozonoff.

Researchers have generally avoided the word "recovery," as Dr. Fein and her associates do in this study, to avoid creating false hopes, sounding like marketing materials for treatments, or implying any other outcome than an optimal one is a failure. Yet, while recovery won’t be possible for everyone or the only outcome worth fighting for, this study does provide reason to talk seriously about the possibility of "recovery" as long as it does not detract attention from those who achieve smaller gains.

Meanwhile, other optimal outcomes, as A.A. Broderick has noted, can also "include emergence from isolation into engagement with the world and full participation in an ordinary life, even while retaining significant symptoms," Dr. Ozonoff wrote.

Dr. Volkmar is chief of child psychiatry at Yale-New Haven Hospital and director of the Child Study Center at Yale University. He made these comments in an interview. Dr. Ozonoff, joint editor of the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, is a professor specializing in autism research in the department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of California, Davis. Her comments appeared in a commentary published with the study (J. Child Psychol. Psychiatry 2013;54:113-4).


 

FROM THE JOURNAL OF CHILD PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY

They noted, however, that there may be "subtle residual deficits" among the OO participants that the assessments did not detect, and they are analyzing further results of cognitive ability, language, academics, and executive function testing for later reporting.

Dr. Fein and her associates also noted that analyzing peer interaction and the quality of friendships would more conclusively establish evidence of normal social functioning in the OO group.

The surprisingly higher average IQ scores among the OO individuals also points to the possibility that "above average cognition allowed individuals with ASD to compensate for some of their deficits" or that there was a higher study volunteerism rate among families with higher-IQ children, they said. Further, OO participants were screened to specifically include scores in "the normal range on specific cognitive and adaptive measures," reducing likely differences between the OO and TD children.

The study’s applicability also has significant limitations. The researchers cannot address the question of how many children with ASD can necessarily reach these outcomes, which would require a prospective, longitudinal study. The study also does not offer insights into which interventions – if any – might more likely produce an optimal outcome, which itself was narrowly defined in this study. It’s also unclear whether the optimal outcomes result from compensatory functioning or from actual changes in brain structure and function, Dr. Fein and her associates said.

The researchers also mentioned a lack of diversity in their study, which enrolled mainly children in the northeastern United States and largely white participants. They theorized that OO may be rare in children from minority groups or families with lower socioeconomic status because of lack of optimal interventions or resources.

Other "crucial questions" remain related to the "biology of remediable autism, the course of improvement, and the necessary and sufficient conditions, including treatment, for such improvement," they said.

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health. The authors said that they had no relevant disclosures.

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