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The Utility of the First Year Inventory in Evaluating Autism Symptoms at 12 Months in Infants at High Risk for ASD
Objectives: We examined the utility of information gathered at 12 months via parental questionnaire (First Year Inventory; FYI; Baranek et al., 2003) for predicting a later diagnosis of ASD in HR infants at the domain and construct level as well as at the item level.
Methods: Participants included 96 families of 12-month-old infants: 71 at HR and 25 at low risk (LR) for ASD. The 61 questions on the FYI comprise two domains (Social Communication and Sensory-Regulatory), each domain consisting of four constructs. At 36 months, the infants were extensively assessed (Mullen, ADOS, Reynell, Vineland) by a team of expert clinicians and classified as having ASD (n=16); other delays, subclinical autism symptoms, or a history of either (HR-ATYP; N=36); or typical development (HR-TYP, n=19; LR-TYP, n=25). Analysis consisted of between-group ANOVAs followed by post-hoc tests and classification tree (CART) analysis of FYI items.
Results: The four groups differed on the Social Communication domain (F(3,92)=5.2, p=.002) and two of its four constructs: Social Orienting and Receptive Communication (F(3,92)=3.0, p=.021) and Imitation (F(3,92)=6.0, p=.001). Post-hoc analyses showed that infants with ASD had significantly higher (worse) scores on the Social Communication domain compared to HR-ATYP (p=.025, d=.75) and LR-TYP (p=.001, d=1.18) but not HR-TYP infants. The ASD group had significantly higher scores on the Social Orienting/Receptive Communication construct than the LR-TYP (p=.021, d=.91) group, but not the other HR groups. The ASD group had higher scores on the Imitation construct than the HR-ATYP (p=.004, d=.94), HR-TYP (p=.002, d=1.17), and LR-TYP (p=.002, d=1.10) groups, with large effect sizes for each comparison. There were no between-group differences for the Sensory-Regulatory domain or any of its constructs. The CART analysis revealed that a combination of questions related to recent declines in play and communication and to lack of imitation of vocal sounds correctly predicted almost 2/3 of the children with ASD and 93% of the children without ASD.
Conclusions: Our results suggest that parent-reported information about social communication and imitation in 12-month-old infants helps identify infants at highest risk for an ASD among HR siblings. We will also discuss concordance between parent report and clinician observation as a critical issue in the development of screening tools.