Objectives: a) To study the pattern of core and ‘non-core’ symptoms seen in individuals diagnosed with ASD (b) to study patterns of both types of behaviours in individuals with different genetic and neurodevelopmental conditions.
Methods: The DISCO interview schedule was administered by trained clinicians in the UK and in the Netherlands. Patterns of DISCO items within individuals with ASD were analysed using a database from 200 individuals. Patterns of overlapping behaviours across different conditions were investigated from the DISCO data of 37 individuals with Cornelia de Lange Syndrome, 52 females with Rett Syndrome, 22 individuals with Williams Syndrome, and 60 children with and without epilepsy.
Results: (a) Patterns of behaviours in individuals diagnosed with ASD revealed that ‘non-core’ features were strongly associated with ‘core’ features but some classes of non-core features (e.g. sensory atypicalities) were more strongly associated with the core diagnostic domains than were other classes of non-core features (e.g. atypical motor skills). (b) Results for patterns of overlapping behaviours in different neurodevelopmental conditions showed that a high percentage of the individuals with Rett Disorder (39%) and more than half of the Cornelia de Lange group (54%) also had Autistic Disorder. The Williams Syndrome group had distinctive ASD features in the social interaction domain. Children with both epilepsy and ASD differed from children with ASD without epilepsy by having more motor difficulties, developmental delays and challenging behaviours.
Conclusions: The breadth of scope of the DISCO means that it elicits behavioural features that can inform us about ASD features in other developmental disorders and about non-ASD features that may influence the presentation and possibly the development of ASD.
See more of: Clinical Phenotype
See more of: Symptoms, Diagnosis & Phenotype