Cargando…

The Autism - Tics, AD/HD and other Comorbidities inventory (A-TAC): further validation of a telephone interview for epidemiological research

BACKGROUND: Reliable, valid, and easy-to-administer instruments to identify possible caseness and to provide proxies for clinical diagnoses are needed in epidemiological research on child and adolescent mental health. The aim of this study is to provide further validity data for a parent telephone i...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Larson, Tomas, Anckarsäter, Henrik, Gillberg, Carina, Ståhlberg, Ola, Carlström, Eva, Kadesjö, Björn, Råstam, Maria, Lichtenstein, Paul, Gillberg, Christopher
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2823676/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20055988
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-244X-10-1
_version_ 1782177661015031808
author Larson, Tomas
Anckarsäter, Henrik
Gillberg, Carina
Ståhlberg, Ola
Carlström, Eva
Kadesjö, Björn
Råstam, Maria
Lichtenstein, Paul
Gillberg, Christopher
author_facet Larson, Tomas
Anckarsäter, Henrik
Gillberg, Carina
Ståhlberg, Ola
Carlström, Eva
Kadesjö, Björn
Råstam, Maria
Lichtenstein, Paul
Gillberg, Christopher
author_sort Larson, Tomas
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Reliable, valid, and easy-to-administer instruments to identify possible caseness and to provide proxies for clinical diagnoses are needed in epidemiological research on child and adolescent mental health. The aim of this study is to provide further validity data for a parent telephone interview focused on Autism - Tics, Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (AD/HD), and other Comorbidities (A-TAC), for which reliability and preliminary validation data have been previously reported. METHODS: Parents of 91 children clinically diagnosed at a specialized Child Neuropsychiatric Clinic, 366 control children and 319 children for whom clinical diagnoses had been previously assigned were interviewed by the A-TAC over the phone. Interviewers were blind to clinical information. Different scores from the A-TAC were compared to the diagnostic outcome. RESULTS: Areas under ROC curves for interview scores as predictors of clinical diagnoses were around 0.95 for most disorders, including autism spectrum disorders (ASDs), attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (AD/HD), tic disorders, developmental coordination disorders (DCD) and learning disorders, indicating excellent screening properties. Screening cut-off scores with sensitivities above 0.90 (0.95 for ASD and AD/HD) were established for most conditions, as well as cut-off scores to identify proxies to clinical diagnoses with specificities above 0.90 (0.95 for ASD and AD/HD). CONCLUSIONS: The previously reported validity of the A-TAC was supported by this larger replication study using broader scales from the A-TAC-items and a larger number of diagnostic categories. Short versions of algorithms worked as well as larger. Different cut-off levels for screening versus identifying proxies for clinical diagnoses are warranted. Data on the validity for mood problems and oppositional defiant/conduct problems are still lacking. Although the A-TAC is principally intended for epidemiological research and general investigations, the instrument may be useful as a tool to collect information in clinical practice as well.
format Text
id pubmed-2823676
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2010
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-28236762010-02-18 The Autism - Tics, AD/HD and other Comorbidities inventory (A-TAC): further validation of a telephone interview for epidemiological research Larson, Tomas Anckarsäter, Henrik Gillberg, Carina Ståhlberg, Ola Carlström, Eva Kadesjö, Björn Råstam, Maria Lichtenstein, Paul Gillberg, Christopher BMC Psychiatry Research article BACKGROUND: Reliable, valid, and easy-to-administer instruments to identify possible caseness and to provide proxies for clinical diagnoses are needed in epidemiological research on child and adolescent mental health. The aim of this study is to provide further validity data for a parent telephone interview focused on Autism - Tics, Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (AD/HD), and other Comorbidities (A-TAC), for which reliability and preliminary validation data have been previously reported. METHODS: Parents of 91 children clinically diagnosed at a specialized Child Neuropsychiatric Clinic, 366 control children and 319 children for whom clinical diagnoses had been previously assigned were interviewed by the A-TAC over the phone. Interviewers were blind to clinical information. Different scores from the A-TAC were compared to the diagnostic outcome. RESULTS: Areas under ROC curves for interview scores as predictors of clinical diagnoses were around 0.95 for most disorders, including autism spectrum disorders (ASDs), attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (AD/HD), tic disorders, developmental coordination disorders (DCD) and learning disorders, indicating excellent screening properties. Screening cut-off scores with sensitivities above 0.90 (0.95 for ASD and AD/HD) were established for most conditions, as well as cut-off scores to identify proxies to clinical diagnoses with specificities above 0.90 (0.95 for ASD and AD/HD). CONCLUSIONS: The previously reported validity of the A-TAC was supported by this larger replication study using broader scales from the A-TAC-items and a larger number of diagnostic categories. Short versions of algorithms worked as well as larger. Different cut-off levels for screening versus identifying proxies for clinical diagnoses are warranted. Data on the validity for mood problems and oppositional defiant/conduct problems are still lacking. Although the A-TAC is principally intended for epidemiological research and general investigations, the instrument may be useful as a tool to collect information in clinical practice as well. BioMed Central 2010-01-07 /pmc/articles/PMC2823676/ /pubmed/20055988 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-244X-10-1 Text en Copyright ©2010 Larson et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research article
Larson, Tomas
Anckarsäter, Henrik
Gillberg, Carina
Ståhlberg, Ola
Carlström, Eva
Kadesjö, Björn
Råstam, Maria
Lichtenstein, Paul
Gillberg, Christopher
The Autism - Tics, AD/HD and other Comorbidities inventory (A-TAC): further validation of a telephone interview for epidemiological research
title The Autism - Tics, AD/HD and other Comorbidities inventory (A-TAC): further validation of a telephone interview for epidemiological research
title_full The Autism - Tics, AD/HD and other Comorbidities inventory (A-TAC): further validation of a telephone interview for epidemiological research
title_fullStr The Autism - Tics, AD/HD and other Comorbidities inventory (A-TAC): further validation of a telephone interview for epidemiological research
title_full_unstemmed The Autism - Tics, AD/HD and other Comorbidities inventory (A-TAC): further validation of a telephone interview for epidemiological research
title_short The Autism - Tics, AD/HD and other Comorbidities inventory (A-TAC): further validation of a telephone interview for epidemiological research
title_sort autism - tics, ad/hd and other comorbidities inventory (a-tac): further validation of a telephone interview for epidemiological research
topic Research article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2823676/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20055988
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-244X-10-1
work_keys_str_mv AT larsontomas theautismticsadhdandothercomorbiditiesinventoryatacfurthervalidationofatelephoneinterviewforepidemiologicalresearch
AT anckarsaterhenrik theautismticsadhdandothercomorbiditiesinventoryatacfurthervalidationofatelephoneinterviewforepidemiologicalresearch
AT gillbergcarina theautismticsadhdandothercomorbiditiesinventoryatacfurthervalidationofatelephoneinterviewforepidemiologicalresearch
AT stahlbergola theautismticsadhdandothercomorbiditiesinventoryatacfurthervalidationofatelephoneinterviewforepidemiologicalresearch
AT carlstromeva theautismticsadhdandothercomorbiditiesinventoryatacfurthervalidationofatelephoneinterviewforepidemiologicalresearch
AT kadesjobjorn theautismticsadhdandothercomorbiditiesinventoryatacfurthervalidationofatelephoneinterviewforepidemiologicalresearch
AT rastammaria theautismticsadhdandothercomorbiditiesinventoryatacfurthervalidationofatelephoneinterviewforepidemiologicalresearch
AT lichtensteinpaul theautismticsadhdandothercomorbiditiesinventoryatacfurthervalidationofatelephoneinterviewforepidemiologicalresearch
AT gillbergchristopher theautismticsadhdandothercomorbiditiesinventoryatacfurthervalidationofatelephoneinterviewforepidemiologicalresearch
AT larsontomas autismticsadhdandothercomorbiditiesinventoryatacfurthervalidationofatelephoneinterviewforepidemiologicalresearch
AT anckarsaterhenrik autismticsadhdandothercomorbiditiesinventoryatacfurthervalidationofatelephoneinterviewforepidemiologicalresearch
AT gillbergcarina autismticsadhdandothercomorbiditiesinventoryatacfurthervalidationofatelephoneinterviewforepidemiologicalresearch
AT stahlbergola autismticsadhdandothercomorbiditiesinventoryatacfurthervalidationofatelephoneinterviewforepidemiologicalresearch
AT carlstromeva autismticsadhdandothercomorbiditiesinventoryatacfurthervalidationofatelephoneinterviewforepidemiologicalresearch
AT kadesjobjorn autismticsadhdandothercomorbiditiesinventoryatacfurthervalidationofatelephoneinterviewforepidemiologicalresearch
AT rastammaria autismticsadhdandothercomorbiditiesinventoryatacfurthervalidationofatelephoneinterviewforepidemiologicalresearch
AT lichtensteinpaul autismticsadhdandothercomorbiditiesinventoryatacfurthervalidationofatelephoneinterviewforepidemiologicalresearch
AT gillbergchristopher autismticsadhdandothercomorbiditiesinventoryatacfurthervalidationofatelephoneinterviewforepidemiologicalresearch