Older age at the time of autism spectrum disorder diagnosis was associated with a higher likelihood of psychotropic medication in children aged 6-11, according to Katharine Zuckerman, MD, and her associates.
The mean age at diagnosis for the 722 children included in the study was 4.4 years, with a mean diagnostic delay of 2.2 years. The adjusted odds ratio for psychotropic drug use in children who were diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) after the age of 4 was 3.09, compared with children diagnosed before the age of 4. Children diagnosed at a later age were less likely to receive behavioral intervention (BI) therapy (adjusted odds ratio = 0.44), complementary and alternative medicine (aOR = 0.63), and school-based therapy (aOR = 0.38).
Children who experienced at least 2 years of delay before diagnosis were also significantly more likely to use psychotropic drugs (aOR = 1.77), and less likely to receive BI therapy (aOR = 0.54) and school-based therapy (aOR = 0.59). However, a delay of at least 2 years was associated with a greater chance of receiving complementary and alternative medicine (aOR = 2.81).
“Results suggest that if long-term ASD therapy use is a priority, payers and policymakers may need to proactively accelerate diagnosis by incentivizing screening or enhancing case management of children at high risk of diagnostic delays. From a population standpoint, as children receive earlier ASD diagnoses, payers may expect changes in service use patterns toward more therapy use and less pharmacology,” the investigators wrote.
Find the full study online in Psychiatric Services (doi:10.1176/appi.ps.201500549).