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Improving children’s sleep may reduce internalizing problems long term
SAN FRANCISCO –
, new research showed.“Interventions addressing externalizing difficulties may lead to improvements in sleep, but addressing internalizing difficulties are unlikely to lead to benefits for children’s sleep,” concluded Jon Quach, PhD, of the University of Melbourne and Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, Victoria, Australia, and his colleagues.
Although they also conclude that “addressing sleep problems at earlier time points may reduce both internalizing and externalizing difficulties,” the researchers said the data are inconsistent, only weakly suggesting that sleep influences later externalizing problems at only two different age points, Dr. Quach said when presenting the findings at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting.
The researchers analyzed long-term data from 4,983 children, tracked from ages 4-5 years in 2004 through 12-13 years in 2012 in the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children – Kindergarten Cohort. The average age of the children’s primary caregivers was 35 years, and 86% of the households had English as the main language. Most of the households were two-parent (86%), and more than half the parents (58.2%) had completed high school. Study retention at last follow-up was 79%.
Data collection every 2 years included parent-reported sleep problems and child behavior. Behavior assessment came from the parent-reported Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire for externalizing and internalizing difficulties. Parents reported severity of sleep difficulties and presence of specific problems at least 4 nights a week: difficulty falling asleep, night waking, sleep restlessness, and not wanting to sleep alone.
The researchers investigated the direction of influence – potential but unproven causation – between sleep problems and internalizing and externalizing problems. The analysis also assessed the extent of the associations. The first pair of analyses examined the relationship between sleeping and either externalizing or internalizing problems, independently assessed.
The findings revealed that sleeping problems were primarily associated with later internalizing difficulties, strongly suggesting that sleeping issues may cause or contribute to internalizing issues 2 years later.
With externalizing problems, however, the effect of poor sleep was inconsistent: Only at one point did it appear that sleeping difficulties contributed to externalizing difficulties. Instead, externalizing problems appeared to contribute to sleeping difficulties at three out of four time points. (The exception was that externalizing problems at ages 8-9 years did not appear to affect sleep at ages 10-11 years.) Though inconsistent, the results suggest that externalizing problems likely affect difficulty sleeping much more so than the other way around.
Then the researchers assessed the interacting associations between all three factors together. At all ages, poor sleep appeared to lead to internalizing difficulties 2 years later. Only once – at ages 6-7 years – did internalizing problems appear to influence sleep 2 years later.
The relationship between sleeping problems and externalizing problems was more complex and less consistent. Externalizing problems often, but not always, were positively associated with sleeping problems 2 years later. And only at ages 4-5 years did difficulty sleeping appear to lead to externalizing problems at ages 6-7 years.
In addition, independent of any interaction with sleeping problems, externalizing difficulties appeared to lead to internalizing problems at all time points.
Although this type of analysis can strongly suggest a direction of causality, Dr. Quach noted, the associations remain subject to the limitations of any observational data, where clearly determining causation or its direction is not possible.
The Australian Research Council and the National Health Medical Research Council in Australia funded the research. The authors did not report any conflicts of interest.
SAN FRANCISCO –
, new research showed.“Interventions addressing externalizing difficulties may lead to improvements in sleep, but addressing internalizing difficulties are unlikely to lead to benefits for children’s sleep,” concluded Jon Quach, PhD, of the University of Melbourne and Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, Victoria, Australia, and his colleagues.
Although they also conclude that “addressing sleep problems at earlier time points may reduce both internalizing and externalizing difficulties,” the researchers said the data are inconsistent, only weakly suggesting that sleep influences later externalizing problems at only two different age points, Dr. Quach said when presenting the findings at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting.
The researchers analyzed long-term data from 4,983 children, tracked from ages 4-5 years in 2004 through 12-13 years in 2012 in the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children – Kindergarten Cohort. The average age of the children’s primary caregivers was 35 years, and 86% of the households had English as the main language. Most of the households were two-parent (86%), and more than half the parents (58.2%) had completed high school. Study retention at last follow-up was 79%.
Data collection every 2 years included parent-reported sleep problems and child behavior. Behavior assessment came from the parent-reported Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire for externalizing and internalizing difficulties. Parents reported severity of sleep difficulties and presence of specific problems at least 4 nights a week: difficulty falling asleep, night waking, sleep restlessness, and not wanting to sleep alone.
The researchers investigated the direction of influence – potential but unproven causation – between sleep problems and internalizing and externalizing problems. The analysis also assessed the extent of the associations. The first pair of analyses examined the relationship between sleeping and either externalizing or internalizing problems, independently assessed.
The findings revealed that sleeping problems were primarily associated with later internalizing difficulties, strongly suggesting that sleeping issues may cause or contribute to internalizing issues 2 years later.
With externalizing problems, however, the effect of poor sleep was inconsistent: Only at one point did it appear that sleeping difficulties contributed to externalizing difficulties. Instead, externalizing problems appeared to contribute to sleeping difficulties at three out of four time points. (The exception was that externalizing problems at ages 8-9 years did not appear to affect sleep at ages 10-11 years.) Though inconsistent, the results suggest that externalizing problems likely affect difficulty sleeping much more so than the other way around.
Then the researchers assessed the interacting associations between all three factors together. At all ages, poor sleep appeared to lead to internalizing difficulties 2 years later. Only once – at ages 6-7 years – did internalizing problems appear to influence sleep 2 years later.
The relationship between sleeping problems and externalizing problems was more complex and less consistent. Externalizing problems often, but not always, were positively associated with sleeping problems 2 years later. And only at ages 4-5 years did difficulty sleeping appear to lead to externalizing problems at ages 6-7 years.
In addition, independent of any interaction with sleeping problems, externalizing difficulties appeared to lead to internalizing problems at all time points.
Although this type of analysis can strongly suggest a direction of causality, Dr. Quach noted, the associations remain subject to the limitations of any observational data, where clearly determining causation or its direction is not possible.
The Australian Research Council and the National Health Medical Research Council in Australia funded the research. The authors did not report any conflicts of interest.
SAN FRANCISCO –
, new research showed.“Interventions addressing externalizing difficulties may lead to improvements in sleep, but addressing internalizing difficulties are unlikely to lead to benefits for children’s sleep,” concluded Jon Quach, PhD, of the University of Melbourne and Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, Victoria, Australia, and his colleagues.
Although they also conclude that “addressing sleep problems at earlier time points may reduce both internalizing and externalizing difficulties,” the researchers said the data are inconsistent, only weakly suggesting that sleep influences later externalizing problems at only two different age points, Dr. Quach said when presenting the findings at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting.
The researchers analyzed long-term data from 4,983 children, tracked from ages 4-5 years in 2004 through 12-13 years in 2012 in the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children – Kindergarten Cohort. The average age of the children’s primary caregivers was 35 years, and 86% of the households had English as the main language. Most of the households were two-parent (86%), and more than half the parents (58.2%) had completed high school. Study retention at last follow-up was 79%.
Data collection every 2 years included parent-reported sleep problems and child behavior. Behavior assessment came from the parent-reported Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire for externalizing and internalizing difficulties. Parents reported severity of sleep difficulties and presence of specific problems at least 4 nights a week: difficulty falling asleep, night waking, sleep restlessness, and not wanting to sleep alone.
The researchers investigated the direction of influence – potential but unproven causation – between sleep problems and internalizing and externalizing problems. The analysis also assessed the extent of the associations. The first pair of analyses examined the relationship between sleeping and either externalizing or internalizing problems, independently assessed.
The findings revealed that sleeping problems were primarily associated with later internalizing difficulties, strongly suggesting that sleeping issues may cause or contribute to internalizing issues 2 years later.
With externalizing problems, however, the effect of poor sleep was inconsistent: Only at one point did it appear that sleeping difficulties contributed to externalizing difficulties. Instead, externalizing problems appeared to contribute to sleeping difficulties at three out of four time points. (The exception was that externalizing problems at ages 8-9 years did not appear to affect sleep at ages 10-11 years.) Though inconsistent, the results suggest that externalizing problems likely affect difficulty sleeping much more so than the other way around.
Then the researchers assessed the interacting associations between all three factors together. At all ages, poor sleep appeared to lead to internalizing difficulties 2 years later. Only once – at ages 6-7 years – did internalizing problems appear to influence sleep 2 years later.
The relationship between sleeping problems and externalizing problems was more complex and less consistent. Externalizing problems often, but not always, were positively associated with sleeping problems 2 years later. And only at ages 4-5 years did difficulty sleeping appear to lead to externalizing problems at ages 6-7 years.
In addition, independent of any interaction with sleeping problems, externalizing difficulties appeared to lead to internalizing problems at all time points.
Although this type of analysis can strongly suggest a direction of causality, Dr. Quach noted, the associations remain subject to the limitations of any observational data, where clearly determining causation or its direction is not possible.
The Australian Research Council and the National Health Medical Research Council in Australia funded the research. The authors did not report any conflicts of interest.
AT PAS 17
Key clinical point: Improving children’s sleep may reduce internalizing problems 2 years later.
Major finding: Externalizing problems were associated with sleep problems later on, and sleeping difficulties were linked to later internalizing problems.
Data source: The findings are based on analysis of four longitudinal, biennial questionnaires from parents of 4,983 Australian children aged 4-5 years, starting in 2004.
Disclosures: The Australian Research Council and the National Health Medical Research Council in Australia funded the research. The authors did not report any conflicts of interest.
Online intervention aims to prevent teen depression
AT PAS 17
SAN FRANCISCO – One in eight teenagers experienced at least one major depressive episode in 2015, according to the National Institute for Mental Health. Yet the recent uptick in teen suicide rates suggests that U.S. mental health care services are not meeting their needs.
A team at the University of Illinois in Chicago, led by Benjamin Van Voorhees, MD, MPH, hopes so, and they have spent the past several years developing and testing such a program with a National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) grant.
“Adolescents are in a really plastic moment in their psychobehavioral repertoire and brain development as they program themselves to adapt to adult life,” Dr. Van Voorhees said in an interview. “Right now we have nothing to offer those individuals other than an occasional referral to an overtaxed mental health system. The only rational strategy is a mass dissemination model, which is going to have to be technology.”
The CATCH-IT program is aimed at teens showing early signs of depression or predepressive symptoms as determined through screening during well checks or other visits for acute or chronic concerns. The study uses multiple screening tools in selecting participants, but Dr. Van Voorhees estimates that screening in practice would require about 1-2 minutes of a medical assistant’s or nurse’s time, followed by 1-2 minutes of the practitioner’s time for positive screens – “and one in five of those screens is going to be positive,” he said.
“The thing we want to convey to primary care practitioners is that these individuals are coming through your office every day, we’re doing nothing for them, and in some ways we are ignoring their enormous future potential adverse trajectory toward mental disorders,” he said.
The program includes 14 modules drawing on cognitive behavioral therapy, behavioral activation, interpersonal psychotherapy, and community resiliency. Six archetypal teens – such as teen living with a single mom or one whose parents are divorcing – are featured in each of the modules to demonstrate six ways of applying the strategies taught in that module. The archetypal teens are around 14-15 years old, but the program is aimed at teens aged 13-18 years, with a reading level at about grade 6, Dr. Van Voorhees said.
In an early pilot, Dr. Van Voorhees’s research team tested outcomes from the program and how doctors offered it to patients. That cohort comprised 83 adolescents aged 14-21 years who had depressive symptoms without meeting criteria for any mental disorders. All were offered the opportunity to participate in the CATCH-IT program, but 40 received only a brief recommendation from their providers. Providers of the other 43 spent 5-15 minutes doing motivational interviewing with the teens, who subsequently received three motivational follow-up calls from social workers.
Two and a half years after those teens used the CATCH-IT intervention, they showed “a sustained reduction in automatic negative thoughts and educational impairment,” but no difference in their perceptions of support from family or friends. The lack of a control group in that pilot limits what conclusions can be drawn about the program’s effectiveness, but the researchers did learn that motivational interviewing led to greater engagement with the program, compared with teens who received a brief recommendation of it.
Therefore, in the subsequent – and still ongoing – study, physicians used motivational interviewing when offering teens the opportunity to join the program. That study does include a control group, in which participants are assigned a generic health education program online instead of CATCH-IT, and the randomized participants have been stratified by site, gender, and depression risk level.
The researchers first assessed the baseline characteristics of the population, recruited from 38 clinics in two cities. The study enrolled 369 teens aged 13-18 years – 248 in Chicago and 121 in Boston. All were identified as high risk for depression based on elevated scores on the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression (CES-D) scale or the Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders Scale (K-SADS). Two thirds (68%) of participants are female, and most (63%) are in high school. About a third (34%) are in middle school. The racial/ethnic breakdown of the sample is 21% Hispanic, 26% black, 43% white, 4% Asian, 6% multiracial, and 1% other (which adds up to 101% due to rounding). More than half of the participants’ mothers (60%) and fathers (53%) were college graduates.
The teens completed the CES-D, the Screen for Child Related Anxiety Disorders (SCARED), the Beck Hopelessness Scale (BHS), the CRAFFT screening for adolescent substance misuse and the Disruptive Behaviors Disorder Scale (DBD-A). A parent of each teen also filled out the CES-D and DBD-A.
The baseline results did not suggest any concerns about substance use, hopelessness, or disruptive behaviors such as ADHD or conduct disorder. But the average scores on the CES-D and SCARED sat just at the threshold for a potential depressive or anxiety disorders. A CES-D score of at least 16 suggests a possible depressive disorder, and a SCARED score of at least 25 suggests a possible anxiety disorder. The mean scores on the teens’ CES-D were 17.7 in the Chicago cohort, 15.4 in the Boston cohort and 16.9 for the whole group. Similarly, the SCARED mean scores were 26.3 in the Chicago cohort, 23.5 in the Boston cohort and 25.3 overall.
Scores from K-SADS showed subthreshold levels of depressed mood in 36% of teens in both cities, and a nearly identical subthreshold level of irritability. Subthreshold anhedonia was identified in 20% of the overall population. One percent of the overall population had current suicidal ideation.
The next steps are to analyze outcomes among the participants, as the team is doing currently. They have just passed the 1-year anniversary of the trial and are analyzing the data they collected over the past year. The study will run an additional year for longer-term data collection.
One of the abstracts presented at PAS explored the economic implications of incorporating CATCH-IT in primary care.
“The cost for implementation is where the challenge is,” Dr. Van Voorhees said. “Screening takes time, and calling people takes time.” But when spread across a practice’s overall clientele in a year, the costs drop considerably, he said, and savings from effective identification and depression prevention may outweigh costs. The researchers have not yet conducted a cost-effectiveness study because they still are analyzing data on outcomes.
But Dr. Van Voorhees is optimistic about the possibilities of the program.
“What this entire model is about is, how do we understand what’s going on in the environment of the primary care clinic to find these people, identify them, and motivate them, and how can we give them something relevant enough to actually complete,” Dr. Van Voorhees said in the interview. “Then, let’s actually see if it changes their behavioral trajectory.”
The National Institute of Mental Health funded the research. Dr. Van Voorhees has consulted for Prevail Health Solutions, Mevident, Social Kinetics, and Hong Kong University on development of Internet-based interventions.
AT PAS 17
SAN FRANCISCO – One in eight teenagers experienced at least one major depressive episode in 2015, according to the National Institute for Mental Health. Yet the recent uptick in teen suicide rates suggests that U.S. mental health care services are not meeting their needs.
A team at the University of Illinois in Chicago, led by Benjamin Van Voorhees, MD, MPH, hopes so, and they have spent the past several years developing and testing such a program with a National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) grant.
“Adolescents are in a really plastic moment in their psychobehavioral repertoire and brain development as they program themselves to adapt to adult life,” Dr. Van Voorhees said in an interview. “Right now we have nothing to offer those individuals other than an occasional referral to an overtaxed mental health system. The only rational strategy is a mass dissemination model, which is going to have to be technology.”
The CATCH-IT program is aimed at teens showing early signs of depression or predepressive symptoms as determined through screening during well checks or other visits for acute or chronic concerns. The study uses multiple screening tools in selecting participants, but Dr. Van Voorhees estimates that screening in practice would require about 1-2 minutes of a medical assistant’s or nurse’s time, followed by 1-2 minutes of the practitioner’s time for positive screens – “and one in five of those screens is going to be positive,” he said.
“The thing we want to convey to primary care practitioners is that these individuals are coming through your office every day, we’re doing nothing for them, and in some ways we are ignoring their enormous future potential adverse trajectory toward mental disorders,” he said.
The program includes 14 modules drawing on cognitive behavioral therapy, behavioral activation, interpersonal psychotherapy, and community resiliency. Six archetypal teens – such as teen living with a single mom or one whose parents are divorcing – are featured in each of the modules to demonstrate six ways of applying the strategies taught in that module. The archetypal teens are around 14-15 years old, but the program is aimed at teens aged 13-18 years, with a reading level at about grade 6, Dr. Van Voorhees said.
In an early pilot, Dr. Van Voorhees’s research team tested outcomes from the program and how doctors offered it to patients. That cohort comprised 83 adolescents aged 14-21 years who had depressive symptoms without meeting criteria for any mental disorders. All were offered the opportunity to participate in the CATCH-IT program, but 40 received only a brief recommendation from their providers. Providers of the other 43 spent 5-15 minutes doing motivational interviewing with the teens, who subsequently received three motivational follow-up calls from social workers.
Two and a half years after those teens used the CATCH-IT intervention, they showed “a sustained reduction in automatic negative thoughts and educational impairment,” but no difference in their perceptions of support from family or friends. The lack of a control group in that pilot limits what conclusions can be drawn about the program’s effectiveness, but the researchers did learn that motivational interviewing led to greater engagement with the program, compared with teens who received a brief recommendation of it.
Therefore, in the subsequent – and still ongoing – study, physicians used motivational interviewing when offering teens the opportunity to join the program. That study does include a control group, in which participants are assigned a generic health education program online instead of CATCH-IT, and the randomized participants have been stratified by site, gender, and depression risk level.
The researchers first assessed the baseline characteristics of the population, recruited from 38 clinics in two cities. The study enrolled 369 teens aged 13-18 years – 248 in Chicago and 121 in Boston. All were identified as high risk for depression based on elevated scores on the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression (CES-D) scale or the Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders Scale (K-SADS). Two thirds (68%) of participants are female, and most (63%) are in high school. About a third (34%) are in middle school. The racial/ethnic breakdown of the sample is 21% Hispanic, 26% black, 43% white, 4% Asian, 6% multiracial, and 1% other (which adds up to 101% due to rounding). More than half of the participants’ mothers (60%) and fathers (53%) were college graduates.
The teens completed the CES-D, the Screen for Child Related Anxiety Disorders (SCARED), the Beck Hopelessness Scale (BHS), the CRAFFT screening for adolescent substance misuse and the Disruptive Behaviors Disorder Scale (DBD-A). A parent of each teen also filled out the CES-D and DBD-A.
The baseline results did not suggest any concerns about substance use, hopelessness, or disruptive behaviors such as ADHD or conduct disorder. But the average scores on the CES-D and SCARED sat just at the threshold for a potential depressive or anxiety disorders. A CES-D score of at least 16 suggests a possible depressive disorder, and a SCARED score of at least 25 suggests a possible anxiety disorder. The mean scores on the teens’ CES-D were 17.7 in the Chicago cohort, 15.4 in the Boston cohort and 16.9 for the whole group. Similarly, the SCARED mean scores were 26.3 in the Chicago cohort, 23.5 in the Boston cohort and 25.3 overall.
Scores from K-SADS showed subthreshold levels of depressed mood in 36% of teens in both cities, and a nearly identical subthreshold level of irritability. Subthreshold anhedonia was identified in 20% of the overall population. One percent of the overall population had current suicidal ideation.
The next steps are to analyze outcomes among the participants, as the team is doing currently. They have just passed the 1-year anniversary of the trial and are analyzing the data they collected over the past year. The study will run an additional year for longer-term data collection.
One of the abstracts presented at PAS explored the economic implications of incorporating CATCH-IT in primary care.
“The cost for implementation is where the challenge is,” Dr. Van Voorhees said. “Screening takes time, and calling people takes time.” But when spread across a practice’s overall clientele in a year, the costs drop considerably, he said, and savings from effective identification and depression prevention may outweigh costs. The researchers have not yet conducted a cost-effectiveness study because they still are analyzing data on outcomes.
But Dr. Van Voorhees is optimistic about the possibilities of the program.
“What this entire model is about is, how do we understand what’s going on in the environment of the primary care clinic to find these people, identify them, and motivate them, and how can we give them something relevant enough to actually complete,” Dr. Van Voorhees said in the interview. “Then, let’s actually see if it changes their behavioral trajectory.”
The National Institute of Mental Health funded the research. Dr. Van Voorhees has consulted for Prevail Health Solutions, Mevident, Social Kinetics, and Hong Kong University on development of Internet-based interventions.
AT PAS 17
SAN FRANCISCO – One in eight teenagers experienced at least one major depressive episode in 2015, according to the National Institute for Mental Health. Yet the recent uptick in teen suicide rates suggests that U.S. mental health care services are not meeting their needs.
A team at the University of Illinois in Chicago, led by Benjamin Van Voorhees, MD, MPH, hopes so, and they have spent the past several years developing and testing such a program with a National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) grant.
“Adolescents are in a really plastic moment in their psychobehavioral repertoire and brain development as they program themselves to adapt to adult life,” Dr. Van Voorhees said in an interview. “Right now we have nothing to offer those individuals other than an occasional referral to an overtaxed mental health system. The only rational strategy is a mass dissemination model, which is going to have to be technology.”
The CATCH-IT program is aimed at teens showing early signs of depression or predepressive symptoms as determined through screening during well checks or other visits for acute or chronic concerns. The study uses multiple screening tools in selecting participants, but Dr. Van Voorhees estimates that screening in practice would require about 1-2 minutes of a medical assistant’s or nurse’s time, followed by 1-2 minutes of the practitioner’s time for positive screens – “and one in five of those screens is going to be positive,” he said.
“The thing we want to convey to primary care practitioners is that these individuals are coming through your office every day, we’re doing nothing for them, and in some ways we are ignoring their enormous future potential adverse trajectory toward mental disorders,” he said.
The program includes 14 modules drawing on cognitive behavioral therapy, behavioral activation, interpersonal psychotherapy, and community resiliency. Six archetypal teens – such as teen living with a single mom or one whose parents are divorcing – are featured in each of the modules to demonstrate six ways of applying the strategies taught in that module. The archetypal teens are around 14-15 years old, but the program is aimed at teens aged 13-18 years, with a reading level at about grade 6, Dr. Van Voorhees said.
In an early pilot, Dr. Van Voorhees’s research team tested outcomes from the program and how doctors offered it to patients. That cohort comprised 83 adolescents aged 14-21 years who had depressive symptoms without meeting criteria for any mental disorders. All were offered the opportunity to participate in the CATCH-IT program, but 40 received only a brief recommendation from their providers. Providers of the other 43 spent 5-15 minutes doing motivational interviewing with the teens, who subsequently received three motivational follow-up calls from social workers.
Two and a half years after those teens used the CATCH-IT intervention, they showed “a sustained reduction in automatic negative thoughts and educational impairment,” but no difference in their perceptions of support from family or friends. The lack of a control group in that pilot limits what conclusions can be drawn about the program’s effectiveness, but the researchers did learn that motivational interviewing led to greater engagement with the program, compared with teens who received a brief recommendation of it.
Therefore, in the subsequent – and still ongoing – study, physicians used motivational interviewing when offering teens the opportunity to join the program. That study does include a control group, in which participants are assigned a generic health education program online instead of CATCH-IT, and the randomized participants have been stratified by site, gender, and depression risk level.
The researchers first assessed the baseline characteristics of the population, recruited from 38 clinics in two cities. The study enrolled 369 teens aged 13-18 years – 248 in Chicago and 121 in Boston. All were identified as high risk for depression based on elevated scores on the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression (CES-D) scale or the Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders Scale (K-SADS). Two thirds (68%) of participants are female, and most (63%) are in high school. About a third (34%) are in middle school. The racial/ethnic breakdown of the sample is 21% Hispanic, 26% black, 43% white, 4% Asian, 6% multiracial, and 1% other (which adds up to 101% due to rounding). More than half of the participants’ mothers (60%) and fathers (53%) were college graduates.
The teens completed the CES-D, the Screen for Child Related Anxiety Disorders (SCARED), the Beck Hopelessness Scale (BHS), the CRAFFT screening for adolescent substance misuse and the Disruptive Behaviors Disorder Scale (DBD-A). A parent of each teen also filled out the CES-D and DBD-A.
The baseline results did not suggest any concerns about substance use, hopelessness, or disruptive behaviors such as ADHD or conduct disorder. But the average scores on the CES-D and SCARED sat just at the threshold for a potential depressive or anxiety disorders. A CES-D score of at least 16 suggests a possible depressive disorder, and a SCARED score of at least 25 suggests a possible anxiety disorder. The mean scores on the teens’ CES-D were 17.7 in the Chicago cohort, 15.4 in the Boston cohort and 16.9 for the whole group. Similarly, the SCARED mean scores were 26.3 in the Chicago cohort, 23.5 in the Boston cohort and 25.3 overall.
Scores from K-SADS showed subthreshold levels of depressed mood in 36% of teens in both cities, and a nearly identical subthreshold level of irritability. Subthreshold anhedonia was identified in 20% of the overall population. One percent of the overall population had current suicidal ideation.
The next steps are to analyze outcomes among the participants, as the team is doing currently. They have just passed the 1-year anniversary of the trial and are analyzing the data they collected over the past year. The study will run an additional year for longer-term data collection.
One of the abstracts presented at PAS explored the economic implications of incorporating CATCH-IT in primary care.
“The cost for implementation is where the challenge is,” Dr. Van Voorhees said. “Screening takes time, and calling people takes time.” But when spread across a practice’s overall clientele in a year, the costs drop considerably, he said, and savings from effective identification and depression prevention may outweigh costs. The researchers have not yet conducted a cost-effectiveness study because they still are analyzing data on outcomes.
But Dr. Van Voorhees is optimistic about the possibilities of the program.
“What this entire model is about is, how do we understand what’s going on in the environment of the primary care clinic to find these people, identify them, and motivate them, and how can we give them something relevant enough to actually complete,” Dr. Van Voorhees said in the interview. “Then, let’s actually see if it changes their behavioral trajectory.”
The National Institute of Mental Health funded the research. Dr. Van Voorhees has consulted for Prevail Health Solutions, Mevident, Social Kinetics, and Hong Kong University on development of Internet-based interventions.
Office visit conversations are clues to teens’ predepressive symptoms
SAN FRANCISCO –
if you know what to look for, suggest the findings of a qualitative study on teens’ sub-threshold symptoms of depression.“Probing with sensitive questioning and understanding can help providers assess teens’ risks for depression,” said study coauthor Huma Khan, MD, of the University of Illinois Children’s Hospital in Chicago. “Furthermore, close follow-up with teens who mention certain topics, such as losing interest in activities or the loss of a loved one, also may help providers redirect the trajectory of depressive symptoms.”
Despite a lifetime prevalence of depression in adolescents of about 11% and a 12-month prevalence of 7.5%, about 8 in 10 teens do not receive adequate mental health treatment, explained Dr. Khan at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting. Further, primary care providers often lack the time and training to recognize and follow up on early signs of depression in their teen patients.
To better understand ways in which teens may manifest sub-threshold depressive symptoms and possible coping mechanisms, Dr. Khan’s team conducted a qualitative analysis of 37 hour-long interviews with a subsample of teens enrolled in a larger study for adolescents at risk for depression. The teens, recruited from urban and suburban pediatric clinics, were aged 13-18 years and included 12 from Boston and 25 from Chicago. Ten were Hispanic, 15 were African American, and 12 were white.
The participants qualified for the study based on assessments using the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression (CESD) scale and two questions about anhedonia and/or a depressed or irritable mood for at least 2 weeks. Teens with a current diagnosis of major depressive disorder or currently receiving therapy for depression were excluded.
Starting without a priori assumptions regarding potential findings, the researchers each independently used codes to identify key concepts in the transcripts and then categorized the codes. During regular meetings, they compared findings and continued until patterns in the content emerged.
The findings revealed that teens often express sadness in ways that don’t necessarily immediately call to mind a risk for depression.
“Our participants rarely described themselves as ‘depressed’ and instead used less specific terms such as ‘stressed’ or ‘down,’ ” Dr. Khan said. “Adolescents spoke of topics including unhappiness with school or family relationships that could be attributed to normal teenage angst by some. However, with further probing, adolescents revealed – in their own words – how profoundly impacted they were by their symptoms in various aspects of their lives.”
The research identified themes in three areas: external negative sources of stress, expressions of sadness, and coping practices. The three main sources of external stress identified included school pressure, family discord, and death of a close friend or family member.
The school pressures included difficulty understanding the material, completing work, passing classes, and achieving set goals. Problems with family ranged from tension and fighting to verbal and emotional abuse as well as stress from specific changes, such as divorce or frequent moves.
The researchers identified four main categories of sadness expression:
• Feeling stressed, sad, or down, often involving crying and interfering with their lives.
• Anger and irritability, often directed at others: One teen said, “Little things annoy me that used not to annoy me.”
• New feelings of apathy: One teen said, “I can still do the stuff I want to do, I just don’t feel like it. I used to love, love singing. Now, I sing, but I don’t really... it’s not all that.”
• Problems sleeping, including difficulty falling or staying asleep or sleeping too much.
“In contrast to the depression screening scales that only indicated sub-threshold depression, adolescents – with further questioning – spoke of significant symptoms of unhappiness, loss of interest in activities, and anger/irritability,” Dr. Khan said. “Some teens had little insight into their feelings.”
For example, statements made by the teens included, “They don’t understand why I’m upset. Sometimes I don’t either,” and “I just got really sad. I don’t know. You cry, but you don’t really know why you’re crying. You’re just crying.”
The adolescents told the researchers that spending time with friends was a major way of dealing with their feelings. In addition, two-thirds of the participants had a health issue that led them to visit their primary care provider or the emergency department. These conditions included asthma, allergies, thyroid issues, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, migraines and headaches, arthritis, ulcers, abdominal pain, colonoscopy, fainting, acne, needing birth control pills, and panic attacks.
The researchers concluded that you need to tune into the feelings teens have through conversations about seemingly innocuous topics, whether it’s an annual check-up or an appointment for a specific concern. The statements and feelings expressed by the teens cut across ethnicities, indicating a possible “universality of symptoms for teens with predepression,” the researchers noted.
“The take-away message of our study is that adolescent providers can play an important role in the prevention of major depressive episodes by heavily relying on individual interviews with patients,” Dr. Khan said. “These conversations are powerful tools in uncovering psychological disturbances that may progress to debilitating depressive episodes if gone unnoticed.”
The research was funded by the National Institutes of Mental Health. Dr. Khan had no relevant financial disclosures.
SAN FRANCISCO –
if you know what to look for, suggest the findings of a qualitative study on teens’ sub-threshold symptoms of depression.“Probing with sensitive questioning and understanding can help providers assess teens’ risks for depression,” said study coauthor Huma Khan, MD, of the University of Illinois Children’s Hospital in Chicago. “Furthermore, close follow-up with teens who mention certain topics, such as losing interest in activities or the loss of a loved one, also may help providers redirect the trajectory of depressive symptoms.”
Despite a lifetime prevalence of depression in adolescents of about 11% and a 12-month prevalence of 7.5%, about 8 in 10 teens do not receive adequate mental health treatment, explained Dr. Khan at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting. Further, primary care providers often lack the time and training to recognize and follow up on early signs of depression in their teen patients.
To better understand ways in which teens may manifest sub-threshold depressive symptoms and possible coping mechanisms, Dr. Khan’s team conducted a qualitative analysis of 37 hour-long interviews with a subsample of teens enrolled in a larger study for adolescents at risk for depression. The teens, recruited from urban and suburban pediatric clinics, were aged 13-18 years and included 12 from Boston and 25 from Chicago. Ten were Hispanic, 15 were African American, and 12 were white.
The participants qualified for the study based on assessments using the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression (CESD) scale and two questions about anhedonia and/or a depressed or irritable mood for at least 2 weeks. Teens with a current diagnosis of major depressive disorder or currently receiving therapy for depression were excluded.
Starting without a priori assumptions regarding potential findings, the researchers each independently used codes to identify key concepts in the transcripts and then categorized the codes. During regular meetings, they compared findings and continued until patterns in the content emerged.
The findings revealed that teens often express sadness in ways that don’t necessarily immediately call to mind a risk for depression.
“Our participants rarely described themselves as ‘depressed’ and instead used less specific terms such as ‘stressed’ or ‘down,’ ” Dr. Khan said. “Adolescents spoke of topics including unhappiness with school or family relationships that could be attributed to normal teenage angst by some. However, with further probing, adolescents revealed – in their own words – how profoundly impacted they were by their symptoms in various aspects of their lives.”
The research identified themes in three areas: external negative sources of stress, expressions of sadness, and coping practices. The three main sources of external stress identified included school pressure, family discord, and death of a close friend or family member.
The school pressures included difficulty understanding the material, completing work, passing classes, and achieving set goals. Problems with family ranged from tension and fighting to verbal and emotional abuse as well as stress from specific changes, such as divorce or frequent moves.
The researchers identified four main categories of sadness expression:
• Feeling stressed, sad, or down, often involving crying and interfering with their lives.
• Anger and irritability, often directed at others: One teen said, “Little things annoy me that used not to annoy me.”
• New feelings of apathy: One teen said, “I can still do the stuff I want to do, I just don’t feel like it. I used to love, love singing. Now, I sing, but I don’t really... it’s not all that.”
• Problems sleeping, including difficulty falling or staying asleep or sleeping too much.
“In contrast to the depression screening scales that only indicated sub-threshold depression, adolescents – with further questioning – spoke of significant symptoms of unhappiness, loss of interest in activities, and anger/irritability,” Dr. Khan said. “Some teens had little insight into their feelings.”
For example, statements made by the teens included, “They don’t understand why I’m upset. Sometimes I don’t either,” and “I just got really sad. I don’t know. You cry, but you don’t really know why you’re crying. You’re just crying.”
The adolescents told the researchers that spending time with friends was a major way of dealing with their feelings. In addition, two-thirds of the participants had a health issue that led them to visit their primary care provider or the emergency department. These conditions included asthma, allergies, thyroid issues, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, migraines and headaches, arthritis, ulcers, abdominal pain, colonoscopy, fainting, acne, needing birth control pills, and panic attacks.
The researchers concluded that you need to tune into the feelings teens have through conversations about seemingly innocuous topics, whether it’s an annual check-up or an appointment for a specific concern. The statements and feelings expressed by the teens cut across ethnicities, indicating a possible “universality of symptoms for teens with predepression,” the researchers noted.
“The take-away message of our study is that adolescent providers can play an important role in the prevention of major depressive episodes by heavily relying on individual interviews with patients,” Dr. Khan said. “These conversations are powerful tools in uncovering psychological disturbances that may progress to debilitating depressive episodes if gone unnoticed.”
The research was funded by the National Institutes of Mental Health. Dr. Khan had no relevant financial disclosures.
SAN FRANCISCO –
if you know what to look for, suggest the findings of a qualitative study on teens’ sub-threshold symptoms of depression.“Probing with sensitive questioning and understanding can help providers assess teens’ risks for depression,” said study coauthor Huma Khan, MD, of the University of Illinois Children’s Hospital in Chicago. “Furthermore, close follow-up with teens who mention certain topics, such as losing interest in activities or the loss of a loved one, also may help providers redirect the trajectory of depressive symptoms.”
Despite a lifetime prevalence of depression in adolescents of about 11% and a 12-month prevalence of 7.5%, about 8 in 10 teens do not receive adequate mental health treatment, explained Dr. Khan at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting. Further, primary care providers often lack the time and training to recognize and follow up on early signs of depression in their teen patients.
To better understand ways in which teens may manifest sub-threshold depressive symptoms and possible coping mechanisms, Dr. Khan’s team conducted a qualitative analysis of 37 hour-long interviews with a subsample of teens enrolled in a larger study for adolescents at risk for depression. The teens, recruited from urban and suburban pediatric clinics, were aged 13-18 years and included 12 from Boston and 25 from Chicago. Ten were Hispanic, 15 were African American, and 12 were white.
The participants qualified for the study based on assessments using the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression (CESD) scale and two questions about anhedonia and/or a depressed or irritable mood for at least 2 weeks. Teens with a current diagnosis of major depressive disorder or currently receiving therapy for depression were excluded.
Starting without a priori assumptions regarding potential findings, the researchers each independently used codes to identify key concepts in the transcripts and then categorized the codes. During regular meetings, they compared findings and continued until patterns in the content emerged.
The findings revealed that teens often express sadness in ways that don’t necessarily immediately call to mind a risk for depression.
“Our participants rarely described themselves as ‘depressed’ and instead used less specific terms such as ‘stressed’ or ‘down,’ ” Dr. Khan said. “Adolescents spoke of topics including unhappiness with school or family relationships that could be attributed to normal teenage angst by some. However, with further probing, adolescents revealed – in their own words – how profoundly impacted they were by their symptoms in various aspects of their lives.”
The research identified themes in three areas: external negative sources of stress, expressions of sadness, and coping practices. The three main sources of external stress identified included school pressure, family discord, and death of a close friend or family member.
The school pressures included difficulty understanding the material, completing work, passing classes, and achieving set goals. Problems with family ranged from tension and fighting to verbal and emotional abuse as well as stress from specific changes, such as divorce or frequent moves.
The researchers identified four main categories of sadness expression:
• Feeling stressed, sad, or down, often involving crying and interfering with their lives.
• Anger and irritability, often directed at others: One teen said, “Little things annoy me that used not to annoy me.”
• New feelings of apathy: One teen said, “I can still do the stuff I want to do, I just don’t feel like it. I used to love, love singing. Now, I sing, but I don’t really... it’s not all that.”
• Problems sleeping, including difficulty falling or staying asleep or sleeping too much.
“In contrast to the depression screening scales that only indicated sub-threshold depression, adolescents – with further questioning – spoke of significant symptoms of unhappiness, loss of interest in activities, and anger/irritability,” Dr. Khan said. “Some teens had little insight into their feelings.”
For example, statements made by the teens included, “They don’t understand why I’m upset. Sometimes I don’t either,” and “I just got really sad. I don’t know. You cry, but you don’t really know why you’re crying. You’re just crying.”
The adolescents told the researchers that spending time with friends was a major way of dealing with their feelings. In addition, two-thirds of the participants had a health issue that led them to visit their primary care provider or the emergency department. These conditions included asthma, allergies, thyroid issues, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, migraines and headaches, arthritis, ulcers, abdominal pain, colonoscopy, fainting, acne, needing birth control pills, and panic attacks.
The researchers concluded that you need to tune into the feelings teens have through conversations about seemingly innocuous topics, whether it’s an annual check-up or an appointment for a specific concern. The statements and feelings expressed by the teens cut across ethnicities, indicating a possible “universality of symptoms for teens with predepression,” the researchers noted.
“The take-away message of our study is that adolescent providers can play an important role in the prevention of major depressive episodes by heavily relying on individual interviews with patients,” Dr. Khan said. “These conversations are powerful tools in uncovering psychological disturbances that may progress to debilitating depressive episodes if gone unnoticed.”
The research was funded by the National Institutes of Mental Health. Dr. Khan had no relevant financial disclosures.
AT PAS 17
Key clinical point: Dialogue with teens at each visit may reveal predepressive symptoms indicating an opportunity for depression prevention.
Major finding: The research identified themes in three areas: external negative sources of stress, expressions of sadness, and coping practices. The three main sources of external stress identified included school pressure, family discord, and death of a close friend or family member.
Data source: The findings are based on a qualitative analysis of 37 K-SADS interviews with teens aged 13-18 years from Chicago and Boston community pediatric clinics.
Disclosures: The research was funded by the National Institutes of Mental Health. Dr. Khan had no relevant financial disclosures.
Prenatal methadone maintenance linked to poorer child neurodevelopment
SAN FRANCISCO – Infants born to mothers receiving methadone maintenance treatment show poorer-than-average neurodevelopment outcomes, a retrospective study found.
Delays or difficulties in motor abilities appeared first in these children, followed by evidence of cognitive problems in their second year of life, reported Cristina Borradori Tolsa, MD, of University Hospital, Geneva.
“Higher methadone doses during pregnancy can have a detrimental effect on neonatal characteristics and children’s psychomotor development,” Dr. Borradori Tolsa said at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting. She noted the need for long-term follow-up of children prenatally exposed to methadone maintenance therapy to evaluate their cognitive abilities and school readiness at preschool ages.
Only 38% of the women had exclusively used methadone, while the other 62% had used a variety of substances, including cocaine, alcohol, benzodiazepine, marijuana, and antidepressants. The women had a low average socioeconomic status based on their level of education and the occupations of the children’s fathers.
The researchers drew children’s development data from their scores on the Bayley Scales of Infant Development, Second Edition (BSID-II), at 6 months and 18-24 months. The BSID-II has an average score of 100 and includes a mental development index for language and cognitive development, and a psychomotor development index to assess fine and gross motor skills.
At age 6 months, 75% of the 40 children assessed showed some level of motor skills delay, and 33% had a moderate to severe delay in psychomotor skills. A quarter had no delay at all (a score of at least 85). The average psychomotor score at 6 months was 76, and the average cognitive score was 88. Most of the children (60%) did, however, show mental development within the normal range at 6 months.
By the age of 18-24 months, half of the 36 children assessed showed no motor delays, and half showed no cognitive delays. One in five (20%) showed a moderate to severe psychomotor delay, and 14% showed a moderate to severe mental development delay. Mild delays in mental development occurred in 36% of the toddlers assessed, and 30% showed mild delays in psychomotor skills.
A dose-response effect was seen with mothers’ higher doses of methadone at birth and their children’s psychomotor scores at 6 months. No similar association existed for mental development, and the psychomotor association disappeared by 18-24 months. At this older age, however, 68% of children born to mothers taking a high dose of methadone showed cognitive delays, compared with 29% of children born to mothers on a low dose.
Although no differences were seen in newborns’ average gestational age (an average of 37.8 weeks overall) or birth weight between the high-dose and low-dose methadone groups, infants born to mothers with high doses were more likely to be small for gestational age (P = .01) and to need longer treatment duration for neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) (P = .03). Overall, 44% of the newborns were small for gestational age, 28% were born microcephalic, and all but three required pharmacologic treatment for NAS. NAS treatment lasted an average 54 days for the cohort, and the average hospital stay for the babies was 76 days.
The researchers did not report having any external funding or relevant financial disclosures.
SAN FRANCISCO – Infants born to mothers receiving methadone maintenance treatment show poorer-than-average neurodevelopment outcomes, a retrospective study found.
Delays or difficulties in motor abilities appeared first in these children, followed by evidence of cognitive problems in their second year of life, reported Cristina Borradori Tolsa, MD, of University Hospital, Geneva.
“Higher methadone doses during pregnancy can have a detrimental effect on neonatal characteristics and children’s psychomotor development,” Dr. Borradori Tolsa said at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting. She noted the need for long-term follow-up of children prenatally exposed to methadone maintenance therapy to evaluate their cognitive abilities and school readiness at preschool ages.
Only 38% of the women had exclusively used methadone, while the other 62% had used a variety of substances, including cocaine, alcohol, benzodiazepine, marijuana, and antidepressants. The women had a low average socioeconomic status based on their level of education and the occupations of the children’s fathers.
The researchers drew children’s development data from their scores on the Bayley Scales of Infant Development, Second Edition (BSID-II), at 6 months and 18-24 months. The BSID-II has an average score of 100 and includes a mental development index for language and cognitive development, and a psychomotor development index to assess fine and gross motor skills.
At age 6 months, 75% of the 40 children assessed showed some level of motor skills delay, and 33% had a moderate to severe delay in psychomotor skills. A quarter had no delay at all (a score of at least 85). The average psychomotor score at 6 months was 76, and the average cognitive score was 88. Most of the children (60%) did, however, show mental development within the normal range at 6 months.
By the age of 18-24 months, half of the 36 children assessed showed no motor delays, and half showed no cognitive delays. One in five (20%) showed a moderate to severe psychomotor delay, and 14% showed a moderate to severe mental development delay. Mild delays in mental development occurred in 36% of the toddlers assessed, and 30% showed mild delays in psychomotor skills.
A dose-response effect was seen with mothers’ higher doses of methadone at birth and their children’s psychomotor scores at 6 months. No similar association existed for mental development, and the psychomotor association disappeared by 18-24 months. At this older age, however, 68% of children born to mothers taking a high dose of methadone showed cognitive delays, compared with 29% of children born to mothers on a low dose.
Although no differences were seen in newborns’ average gestational age (an average of 37.8 weeks overall) or birth weight between the high-dose and low-dose methadone groups, infants born to mothers with high doses were more likely to be small for gestational age (P = .01) and to need longer treatment duration for neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) (P = .03). Overall, 44% of the newborns were small for gestational age, 28% were born microcephalic, and all but three required pharmacologic treatment for NAS. NAS treatment lasted an average 54 days for the cohort, and the average hospital stay for the babies was 76 days.
The researchers did not report having any external funding or relevant financial disclosures.
SAN FRANCISCO – Infants born to mothers receiving methadone maintenance treatment show poorer-than-average neurodevelopment outcomes, a retrospective study found.
Delays or difficulties in motor abilities appeared first in these children, followed by evidence of cognitive problems in their second year of life, reported Cristina Borradori Tolsa, MD, of University Hospital, Geneva.
“Higher methadone doses during pregnancy can have a detrimental effect on neonatal characteristics and children’s psychomotor development,” Dr. Borradori Tolsa said at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting. She noted the need for long-term follow-up of children prenatally exposed to methadone maintenance therapy to evaluate their cognitive abilities and school readiness at preschool ages.
Only 38% of the women had exclusively used methadone, while the other 62% had used a variety of substances, including cocaine, alcohol, benzodiazepine, marijuana, and antidepressants. The women had a low average socioeconomic status based on their level of education and the occupations of the children’s fathers.
The researchers drew children’s development data from their scores on the Bayley Scales of Infant Development, Second Edition (BSID-II), at 6 months and 18-24 months. The BSID-II has an average score of 100 and includes a mental development index for language and cognitive development, and a psychomotor development index to assess fine and gross motor skills.
At age 6 months, 75% of the 40 children assessed showed some level of motor skills delay, and 33% had a moderate to severe delay in psychomotor skills. A quarter had no delay at all (a score of at least 85). The average psychomotor score at 6 months was 76, and the average cognitive score was 88. Most of the children (60%) did, however, show mental development within the normal range at 6 months.
By the age of 18-24 months, half of the 36 children assessed showed no motor delays, and half showed no cognitive delays. One in five (20%) showed a moderate to severe psychomotor delay, and 14% showed a moderate to severe mental development delay. Mild delays in mental development occurred in 36% of the toddlers assessed, and 30% showed mild delays in psychomotor skills.
A dose-response effect was seen with mothers’ higher doses of methadone at birth and their children’s psychomotor scores at 6 months. No similar association existed for mental development, and the psychomotor association disappeared by 18-24 months. At this older age, however, 68% of children born to mothers taking a high dose of methadone showed cognitive delays, compared with 29% of children born to mothers on a low dose.
Although no differences were seen in newborns’ average gestational age (an average of 37.8 weeks overall) or birth weight between the high-dose and low-dose methadone groups, infants born to mothers with high doses were more likely to be small for gestational age (P = .01) and to need longer treatment duration for neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) (P = .03). Overall, 44% of the newborns were small for gestational age, 28% were born microcephalic, and all but three required pharmacologic treatment for NAS. NAS treatment lasted an average 54 days for the cohort, and the average hospital stay for the babies was 76 days.
The researchers did not report having any external funding or relevant financial disclosures.
AT PAS 17
Key clinical point:
Major finding: Three-fourths of methadone-exposed infants showed psychomotor delays at 6 months, and 50% showed cognitive delays and/or psychomotor delays at 18-24 months.
Data source: A retrospective analysis of neurodevelopment scores of children born to 61 mothers in Geneva who received methadone maintenance therapy during pregnancy.
Disclosures: The researchers did not report having any external funding or relevant financial disclosures.
Teen suicide risk significant among screened nonresponders
SAN FRANCISCO – Teens who answered “no response” for one or more questions during a standard suicide screening in the ED typically have a risk of suicide nearly on par with those who answered “yes” to at least one question, results of a study showed.
“Risk for suicidality was substantial among both groups,” Tricia Hengehold of the University of Cincinnati reported at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting. “About half of each group fit the medium-risk category, although the yes group had more teens in the high-risk category comparatively.”
In their study, she and her coinvestigators compared all teens who answered yes or no response (NR) to any question on the Ask Suicide-Screening Questions (ASQ). A total of 3,386 adolescents, aged 12-17 years, were screened when each presented to the ED with a complaint other than a psychiatric one. The data came from a preexisting study not initially designed for studying nonresponders.
The majority of teens (93%) answered no to all ASQ questions: 5% answered yes to at least one ASQ question, regardless of other answers, and 2% answered no response on at least one of the ASQ questions, but did not answer yes to any of them.
The average age of participants was 14 years among all response groups, but females were overrepresented in the yes and NR groups: 74% of females answered yes to one of the ASQ questions, compared with just 26% of males. Similarly, 79% of females were classified as nonresponders, vs. 21% of males. In the negative screen group, however, females (54%) and males (46%) were much more evenly represented.
Patients who answered yes or NR also were more likely to have Medicaid or Medicare than commercial insurance or a self-pay arrangement. Within the yes group, 56% had public insurance, and 39% had private insurance. In the NR group, 43% had public insurance, and 53% had private insurance.
Any teens who answered yes or NR should have undergone evaluation by a mental health professional, but those answering yes were more likely to get this evaluation than nonresponders. Nearly all (93%) of those answering yes received the evaluation, compared with 79% of nonresponders. Yet half of the nonresponders who were evaluated were recommended for further follow-up, not far behind the 65% recommended from among the yes group.
A clinically significant risk of suicide existed among 93% of those answering yes and 85% of nonresponders, the investigators found. About a third (33%) of the yes group were classified as high risk – suicidal ideation within the past week or no treatment after a previous attempt – while 16% of the nonresponders were.
“The NR group was more often in an earlier stage of change than the yes group, presenting with a greater percentage of teens in the precontemplation category,” Ms. Hengehold said. The precontemplation category, which included 27% of the NR group and 17% of the yes group, referred to teens who did not believe they would benefit from working with a mental health professional.
The contemplation category referred to teens who said they were still thinking about whether to meet with a mental health professional or that they would seek treatment if their suicidality worsened. This category included 9% of yes responders and 14% of nonresponders.
A higher proportion of yes responders (56%) than nonresponders (41%) had reached the preparation stage, which meant they had agreed to set up treatment or had received a referral within a month after their ED visit. A similar percentage of yes responders and nonresponders were currently in treatment, seeing a mental health professional intermittently, or had successfully received therapy.
“The sociodemographic characteristics of teens that endorse a no response are very similar to those of positive endorsers,” she concluded. She noted the potential importance of including an NR option on suicide-screening instruments.
Although nonresponders had clinically significant mental health concerns that indicated a need for further evaluation, these adolescents were less ready to engage in mental health services than those answering yes.
“This may be important when designing suicide risk interventions for each group,” she reported.
The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health. Ms. Hengehold and her associates reported no relevant financial disclosures.
SAN FRANCISCO – Teens who answered “no response” for one or more questions during a standard suicide screening in the ED typically have a risk of suicide nearly on par with those who answered “yes” to at least one question, results of a study showed.
“Risk for suicidality was substantial among both groups,” Tricia Hengehold of the University of Cincinnati reported at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting. “About half of each group fit the medium-risk category, although the yes group had more teens in the high-risk category comparatively.”
In their study, she and her coinvestigators compared all teens who answered yes or no response (NR) to any question on the Ask Suicide-Screening Questions (ASQ). A total of 3,386 adolescents, aged 12-17 years, were screened when each presented to the ED with a complaint other than a psychiatric one. The data came from a preexisting study not initially designed for studying nonresponders.
The majority of teens (93%) answered no to all ASQ questions: 5% answered yes to at least one ASQ question, regardless of other answers, and 2% answered no response on at least one of the ASQ questions, but did not answer yes to any of them.
The average age of participants was 14 years among all response groups, but females were overrepresented in the yes and NR groups: 74% of females answered yes to one of the ASQ questions, compared with just 26% of males. Similarly, 79% of females were classified as nonresponders, vs. 21% of males. In the negative screen group, however, females (54%) and males (46%) were much more evenly represented.
Patients who answered yes or NR also were more likely to have Medicaid or Medicare than commercial insurance or a self-pay arrangement. Within the yes group, 56% had public insurance, and 39% had private insurance. In the NR group, 43% had public insurance, and 53% had private insurance.
Any teens who answered yes or NR should have undergone evaluation by a mental health professional, but those answering yes were more likely to get this evaluation than nonresponders. Nearly all (93%) of those answering yes received the evaluation, compared with 79% of nonresponders. Yet half of the nonresponders who were evaluated were recommended for further follow-up, not far behind the 65% recommended from among the yes group.
A clinically significant risk of suicide existed among 93% of those answering yes and 85% of nonresponders, the investigators found. About a third (33%) of the yes group were classified as high risk – suicidal ideation within the past week or no treatment after a previous attempt – while 16% of the nonresponders were.
“The NR group was more often in an earlier stage of change than the yes group, presenting with a greater percentage of teens in the precontemplation category,” Ms. Hengehold said. The precontemplation category, which included 27% of the NR group and 17% of the yes group, referred to teens who did not believe they would benefit from working with a mental health professional.
The contemplation category referred to teens who said they were still thinking about whether to meet with a mental health professional or that they would seek treatment if their suicidality worsened. This category included 9% of yes responders and 14% of nonresponders.
A higher proportion of yes responders (56%) than nonresponders (41%) had reached the preparation stage, which meant they had agreed to set up treatment or had received a referral within a month after their ED visit. A similar percentage of yes responders and nonresponders were currently in treatment, seeing a mental health professional intermittently, or had successfully received therapy.
“The sociodemographic characteristics of teens that endorse a no response are very similar to those of positive endorsers,” she concluded. She noted the potential importance of including an NR option on suicide-screening instruments.
Although nonresponders had clinically significant mental health concerns that indicated a need for further evaluation, these adolescents were less ready to engage in mental health services than those answering yes.
“This may be important when designing suicide risk interventions for each group,” she reported.
The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health. Ms. Hengehold and her associates reported no relevant financial disclosures.
SAN FRANCISCO – Teens who answered “no response” for one or more questions during a standard suicide screening in the ED typically have a risk of suicide nearly on par with those who answered “yes” to at least one question, results of a study showed.
“Risk for suicidality was substantial among both groups,” Tricia Hengehold of the University of Cincinnati reported at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting. “About half of each group fit the medium-risk category, although the yes group had more teens in the high-risk category comparatively.”
In their study, she and her coinvestigators compared all teens who answered yes or no response (NR) to any question on the Ask Suicide-Screening Questions (ASQ). A total of 3,386 adolescents, aged 12-17 years, were screened when each presented to the ED with a complaint other than a psychiatric one. The data came from a preexisting study not initially designed for studying nonresponders.
The majority of teens (93%) answered no to all ASQ questions: 5% answered yes to at least one ASQ question, regardless of other answers, and 2% answered no response on at least one of the ASQ questions, but did not answer yes to any of them.
The average age of participants was 14 years among all response groups, but females were overrepresented in the yes and NR groups: 74% of females answered yes to one of the ASQ questions, compared with just 26% of males. Similarly, 79% of females were classified as nonresponders, vs. 21% of males. In the negative screen group, however, females (54%) and males (46%) were much more evenly represented.
Patients who answered yes or NR also were more likely to have Medicaid or Medicare than commercial insurance or a self-pay arrangement. Within the yes group, 56% had public insurance, and 39% had private insurance. In the NR group, 43% had public insurance, and 53% had private insurance.
Any teens who answered yes or NR should have undergone evaluation by a mental health professional, but those answering yes were more likely to get this evaluation than nonresponders. Nearly all (93%) of those answering yes received the evaluation, compared with 79% of nonresponders. Yet half of the nonresponders who were evaluated were recommended for further follow-up, not far behind the 65% recommended from among the yes group.
A clinically significant risk of suicide existed among 93% of those answering yes and 85% of nonresponders, the investigators found. About a third (33%) of the yes group were classified as high risk – suicidal ideation within the past week or no treatment after a previous attempt – while 16% of the nonresponders were.
“The NR group was more often in an earlier stage of change than the yes group, presenting with a greater percentage of teens in the precontemplation category,” Ms. Hengehold said. The precontemplation category, which included 27% of the NR group and 17% of the yes group, referred to teens who did not believe they would benefit from working with a mental health professional.
The contemplation category referred to teens who said they were still thinking about whether to meet with a mental health professional or that they would seek treatment if their suicidality worsened. This category included 9% of yes responders and 14% of nonresponders.
A higher proportion of yes responders (56%) than nonresponders (41%) had reached the preparation stage, which meant they had agreed to set up treatment or had received a referral within a month after their ED visit. A similar percentage of yes responders and nonresponders were currently in treatment, seeing a mental health professional intermittently, or had successfully received therapy.
“The sociodemographic characteristics of teens that endorse a no response are very similar to those of positive endorsers,” she concluded. She noted the potential importance of including an NR option on suicide-screening instruments.
Although nonresponders had clinically significant mental health concerns that indicated a need for further evaluation, these adolescents were less ready to engage in mental health services than those answering yes.
“This may be important when designing suicide risk interventions for each group,” she reported.
The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health. Ms. Hengehold and her associates reported no relevant financial disclosures.
AT PAS 17
Key clinical point:
Major finding: Eighty-five percent of teens who were nonresponders on at least one suicide-screening question had a clinically significant risk of suicide, compared with 93% of those answering yes.
Data source: The findings are based on an analysis of responses from 3,386 adolescents screened for suicidality during a nonpsychiatric emergency department visit.
Disclosures: The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health. Ms. Hengehold and her associates reported no relevant financial disclosures.
Adoptions increasingly involve special needs, prenatal drug exposures
SAN FRANCISCO – International adoptions today almost exclusively involve children with special needs, and domestic adoptions are far more likely to involve children exposed prenatally to marijuana, opiates, or another drug, Lisa Prock, MD, MPH, found in a study.
“Pediatric health care providers reviewing referrals for adoption should be knowledgeable about the changing demographics of this population and the long-term implications of prenatal substance exposure, given increasing opiate and marijuana use nationally,” said Dr. Prock of Boston Children’s Hospital.
Although an estimated 2% of children are adopted each year in the United States, trends have been shifting, with domestic adoptions climbing and international adoptions dropping since their peak in 2005. Contributing factors to that decrease include increasing global awareness of international adoption and formal implementation in 2004 of the Hague Convention on the Protection of Children, Dr. Prock reported at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting.
During the initial flood of international adoptions in the 1990s, families sought preadoption consultations, often centering on infectious disease, at an increasing number of adoption clinics. Even with the decline of international adoptions, however, prospective parents still frequently seek information from pediatric providers about children they are considering adopting, whether internationally or domestically.
Prospective parents can receive medical record reviews of children they are considering adopting, provided by adoption agencies or attorneys. Dr. Prock retrospectively reviewed all the preadoptive charts submitted to one adoption clinic during 2 years a decade apart: 63 charts in 2006 and 91 charts in 2016.
Domestic records for both years usually included information about family history, prenatal history, maternal substance abuse history, lab results, and, for newborns, a physical exam. International records, however, generally included only lab results and a physical exam, sometimes with limited information on substance abuse as well, at both time points.
The records reveal just how dramatically referrals have flipped from an international focus to a domestic one in the past decade. International adoption referrals dropped from 84% in 2006 to 29% in 2016 as domestic ones increased from 16% to 71%.
Children with special needs also account for a larger proportion of all adoption referrals today. Just a quarter of international adoption referrals in 2006 involved children with special needs, including cleft lip and/or palate and congenital heart disease, but nearly all international referrals (96%) involved special needs in 2016.
Similarly, domestic adoption referrals in which the child is known to have prenatal exposure to alcohol or drugs doubled from 30% in 2006 to 66% in 2016, driven predominantly by maternal use of marijuana and opiates, Dr. Prock found. It’s important both for providers and for prospective parents to be aware of the higher likelihood that an internationally adopted child will have significant medical and/or developmental needs and that domestically adopted children are more likely to have experienced prenatal drug or alcohol exposures.
“Prospective adoptive parents may benefit from increased understanding of the long-term impact of prenatal substance exposure to marijuana, opiates and other substances,” Dr. Prock said. She also noted the need for prospective parents to be aware of the mental health concerns that can co-occur with substance use even though they may not be reported in preadoptive medical records.
No external funding was used for the research. Dr. Prock had no relevant financial disclosures.
SAN FRANCISCO – International adoptions today almost exclusively involve children with special needs, and domestic adoptions are far more likely to involve children exposed prenatally to marijuana, opiates, or another drug, Lisa Prock, MD, MPH, found in a study.
“Pediatric health care providers reviewing referrals for adoption should be knowledgeable about the changing demographics of this population and the long-term implications of prenatal substance exposure, given increasing opiate and marijuana use nationally,” said Dr. Prock of Boston Children’s Hospital.
Although an estimated 2% of children are adopted each year in the United States, trends have been shifting, with domestic adoptions climbing and international adoptions dropping since their peak in 2005. Contributing factors to that decrease include increasing global awareness of international adoption and formal implementation in 2004 of the Hague Convention on the Protection of Children, Dr. Prock reported at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting.
During the initial flood of international adoptions in the 1990s, families sought preadoption consultations, often centering on infectious disease, at an increasing number of adoption clinics. Even with the decline of international adoptions, however, prospective parents still frequently seek information from pediatric providers about children they are considering adopting, whether internationally or domestically.
Prospective parents can receive medical record reviews of children they are considering adopting, provided by adoption agencies or attorneys. Dr. Prock retrospectively reviewed all the preadoptive charts submitted to one adoption clinic during 2 years a decade apart: 63 charts in 2006 and 91 charts in 2016.
Domestic records for both years usually included information about family history, prenatal history, maternal substance abuse history, lab results, and, for newborns, a physical exam. International records, however, generally included only lab results and a physical exam, sometimes with limited information on substance abuse as well, at both time points.
The records reveal just how dramatically referrals have flipped from an international focus to a domestic one in the past decade. International adoption referrals dropped from 84% in 2006 to 29% in 2016 as domestic ones increased from 16% to 71%.
Children with special needs also account for a larger proportion of all adoption referrals today. Just a quarter of international adoption referrals in 2006 involved children with special needs, including cleft lip and/or palate and congenital heart disease, but nearly all international referrals (96%) involved special needs in 2016.
Similarly, domestic adoption referrals in which the child is known to have prenatal exposure to alcohol or drugs doubled from 30% in 2006 to 66% in 2016, driven predominantly by maternal use of marijuana and opiates, Dr. Prock found. It’s important both for providers and for prospective parents to be aware of the higher likelihood that an internationally adopted child will have significant medical and/or developmental needs and that domestically adopted children are more likely to have experienced prenatal drug or alcohol exposures.
“Prospective adoptive parents may benefit from increased understanding of the long-term impact of prenatal substance exposure to marijuana, opiates and other substances,” Dr. Prock said. She also noted the need for prospective parents to be aware of the mental health concerns that can co-occur with substance use even though they may not be reported in preadoptive medical records.
No external funding was used for the research. Dr. Prock had no relevant financial disclosures.
SAN FRANCISCO – International adoptions today almost exclusively involve children with special needs, and domestic adoptions are far more likely to involve children exposed prenatally to marijuana, opiates, or another drug, Lisa Prock, MD, MPH, found in a study.
“Pediatric health care providers reviewing referrals for adoption should be knowledgeable about the changing demographics of this population and the long-term implications of prenatal substance exposure, given increasing opiate and marijuana use nationally,” said Dr. Prock of Boston Children’s Hospital.
Although an estimated 2% of children are adopted each year in the United States, trends have been shifting, with domestic adoptions climbing and international adoptions dropping since their peak in 2005. Contributing factors to that decrease include increasing global awareness of international adoption and formal implementation in 2004 of the Hague Convention on the Protection of Children, Dr. Prock reported at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting.
During the initial flood of international adoptions in the 1990s, families sought preadoption consultations, often centering on infectious disease, at an increasing number of adoption clinics. Even with the decline of international adoptions, however, prospective parents still frequently seek information from pediatric providers about children they are considering adopting, whether internationally or domestically.
Prospective parents can receive medical record reviews of children they are considering adopting, provided by adoption agencies or attorneys. Dr. Prock retrospectively reviewed all the preadoptive charts submitted to one adoption clinic during 2 years a decade apart: 63 charts in 2006 and 91 charts in 2016.
Domestic records for both years usually included information about family history, prenatal history, maternal substance abuse history, lab results, and, for newborns, a physical exam. International records, however, generally included only lab results and a physical exam, sometimes with limited information on substance abuse as well, at both time points.
The records reveal just how dramatically referrals have flipped from an international focus to a domestic one in the past decade. International adoption referrals dropped from 84% in 2006 to 29% in 2016 as domestic ones increased from 16% to 71%.
Children with special needs also account for a larger proportion of all adoption referrals today. Just a quarter of international adoption referrals in 2006 involved children with special needs, including cleft lip and/or palate and congenital heart disease, but nearly all international referrals (96%) involved special needs in 2016.
Similarly, domestic adoption referrals in which the child is known to have prenatal exposure to alcohol or drugs doubled from 30% in 2006 to 66% in 2016, driven predominantly by maternal use of marijuana and opiates, Dr. Prock found. It’s important both for providers and for prospective parents to be aware of the higher likelihood that an internationally adopted child will have significant medical and/or developmental needs and that domestically adopted children are more likely to have experienced prenatal drug or alcohol exposures.
“Prospective adoptive parents may benefit from increased understanding of the long-term impact of prenatal substance exposure to marijuana, opiates and other substances,” Dr. Prock said. She also noted the need for prospective parents to be aware of the mental health concerns that can co-occur with substance use even though they may not be reported in preadoptive medical records.
No external funding was used for the research. Dr. Prock had no relevant financial disclosures.
AT PAS 17
Key clinical point:
Major finding: International adoption referrals with special needs increased from 25% to 96% from 2006 to 2016; domestic referrals with prenatal substance exposure increased from 30% to 66% over the same time period.
Data source: A retrospective review of all preadoptive medical records at a single adoption clinic in 2006 and 2016.
Disclosures: The researchers did not receive external funding. Dr. Prock had no relevant financial disclosures.
Telemedicine visits after NICU discharge improved care, processes
SAN FRANCISCO – Using telemedicine for a follow-up appointment 1 week after discharge of medically complex infants reduced extra visits or calls to a clinic or emergency department, a recent study found.
The telemedicine visits also helped providers identify ways to improve the neonatal ICU (NICU) discharge process while assessing infants’ home care and answering parents’ questions.
The pilot project (at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia) requires more clinical research to validate its findings, but offered enough benefits for the hospital to consider integrating telemedicine visits into the routine discharge process, said Marisa L. Brant, MD, a neonatology fellow at the hospital.
The researchers assessed whether telemedicine visits could ease the transition from neonatal intensive care to home care, respond adequately to caregivers’ needs during that transition, reduce emergency department visits and readmissions, and detect and address any potential problems. The visits also provided an opportunity for feedback on caregivers’ experiences during discharge.
The 92 patients all were medically complex infants who went home with respiratory or feeding equipment, surgical sites and/or complex medication administration. For example, 28 infants had been sent home with a nasogastric tube, 13 had a gastrostomy tube, and 13 had an apnea monitor. Overall, participants had been discharged with an average 2.3 medications and 4.8 scheduled subspecialty follow-up appointments.
The most common conditions among the participants were gastrointestinal disease, neurologic disease, and congenital diaphragmatic hernia or lung lesions. Other conditions included omphalocele, genetic disorders, tracheoesophageal fistula or esophageal atresia and chronic lung disease, or another respiratory disease, Dr. Brant reported at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting.
Families could enroll in the study only if they had a smart device (such as a tablet) and wireless Internet access at home. One week after the infant’s discharge from the NICU, the caregivers received one telemedicine visit with a team that included neonatologists, neonatal fellows, nurse practitioners, and a telemedicine coordinator or support staffer. During the visit, the providers observed the infant and the home environment, and evaluated care practices, including tube feedings, respiratory support, management of surgical wound sites, and administration of medications.
The providers also reviewed how to use the medical equipment, gathered follow-up information about the child’s health, and answered caregivers’ questions. The providers did not bill for telemedicine visits since it was part of a pilot study, but the participants did need to reside in Pennsylvania or New Jersey to meet provider licensing regulations.
Among the 93 telemedicine visits, half (50%) prevented the family from calling or visiting a provider, and 12% of them led to an earlier follow-up appointment for the child. During the video observations, providers addressed 14 issues related to the child’s sleep environment, respiratory status, surgical sites, or dermatological issues. Among 78 total concerns identified in the visits, 35% related to the surgical site, 33% related to feeding, 19% related to respiratory concerns, and 13% related to medication administration.
The provider team also asked families during the visit about their experiences during discharge. A quarter of the families (26%) said they needed more parental education during discharge. In addition, 14% mentioned problems with scheduling follow-up appointments, and 12% had problems related to case management and insurance. Other issues raised by parents related to home equipment, early intervention, home feeding or medications, and diagnostic logistics.
In subsequent satisfaction surveys filled out by caregivers about the telemedicine visit itself, the median rating was 94.5 on a scale of 0 (not at all satisfied) to 100 (extremely satisfied). The overall intervention was 92% successful in its completion. The only follow-up telemedicine visits that did not occur resulted from malfunctioning wireless connection or a mobile app problem. On a scale of 1 to 100 (best), caregivers rated the video quality as an average 78, the Internet reliability as 79, and the ease of using the camera as 91. One of the biggest benefits of the intervention, Dr. Brant pointed out, is that using telemedicine bypasses some of the geographic and time-related obstacles that can occur with follow-ups.
Dr. Brant had no relevant financial disclosures and did not report using any external funding.
SAN FRANCISCO – Using telemedicine for a follow-up appointment 1 week after discharge of medically complex infants reduced extra visits or calls to a clinic or emergency department, a recent study found.
The telemedicine visits also helped providers identify ways to improve the neonatal ICU (NICU) discharge process while assessing infants’ home care and answering parents’ questions.
The pilot project (at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia) requires more clinical research to validate its findings, but offered enough benefits for the hospital to consider integrating telemedicine visits into the routine discharge process, said Marisa L. Brant, MD, a neonatology fellow at the hospital.
The researchers assessed whether telemedicine visits could ease the transition from neonatal intensive care to home care, respond adequately to caregivers’ needs during that transition, reduce emergency department visits and readmissions, and detect and address any potential problems. The visits also provided an opportunity for feedback on caregivers’ experiences during discharge.
The 92 patients all were medically complex infants who went home with respiratory or feeding equipment, surgical sites and/or complex medication administration. For example, 28 infants had been sent home with a nasogastric tube, 13 had a gastrostomy tube, and 13 had an apnea monitor. Overall, participants had been discharged with an average 2.3 medications and 4.8 scheduled subspecialty follow-up appointments.
The most common conditions among the participants were gastrointestinal disease, neurologic disease, and congenital diaphragmatic hernia or lung lesions. Other conditions included omphalocele, genetic disorders, tracheoesophageal fistula or esophageal atresia and chronic lung disease, or another respiratory disease, Dr. Brant reported at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting.
Families could enroll in the study only if they had a smart device (such as a tablet) and wireless Internet access at home. One week after the infant’s discharge from the NICU, the caregivers received one telemedicine visit with a team that included neonatologists, neonatal fellows, nurse practitioners, and a telemedicine coordinator or support staffer. During the visit, the providers observed the infant and the home environment, and evaluated care practices, including tube feedings, respiratory support, management of surgical wound sites, and administration of medications.
The providers also reviewed how to use the medical equipment, gathered follow-up information about the child’s health, and answered caregivers’ questions. The providers did not bill for telemedicine visits since it was part of a pilot study, but the participants did need to reside in Pennsylvania or New Jersey to meet provider licensing regulations.
Among the 93 telemedicine visits, half (50%) prevented the family from calling or visiting a provider, and 12% of them led to an earlier follow-up appointment for the child. During the video observations, providers addressed 14 issues related to the child’s sleep environment, respiratory status, surgical sites, or dermatological issues. Among 78 total concerns identified in the visits, 35% related to the surgical site, 33% related to feeding, 19% related to respiratory concerns, and 13% related to medication administration.
The provider team also asked families during the visit about their experiences during discharge. A quarter of the families (26%) said they needed more parental education during discharge. In addition, 14% mentioned problems with scheduling follow-up appointments, and 12% had problems related to case management and insurance. Other issues raised by parents related to home equipment, early intervention, home feeding or medications, and diagnostic logistics.
In subsequent satisfaction surveys filled out by caregivers about the telemedicine visit itself, the median rating was 94.5 on a scale of 0 (not at all satisfied) to 100 (extremely satisfied). The overall intervention was 92% successful in its completion. The only follow-up telemedicine visits that did not occur resulted from malfunctioning wireless connection or a mobile app problem. On a scale of 1 to 100 (best), caregivers rated the video quality as an average 78, the Internet reliability as 79, and the ease of using the camera as 91. One of the biggest benefits of the intervention, Dr. Brant pointed out, is that using telemedicine bypasses some of the geographic and time-related obstacles that can occur with follow-ups.
Dr. Brant had no relevant financial disclosures and did not report using any external funding.
SAN FRANCISCO – Using telemedicine for a follow-up appointment 1 week after discharge of medically complex infants reduced extra visits or calls to a clinic or emergency department, a recent study found.
The telemedicine visits also helped providers identify ways to improve the neonatal ICU (NICU) discharge process while assessing infants’ home care and answering parents’ questions.
The pilot project (at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia) requires more clinical research to validate its findings, but offered enough benefits for the hospital to consider integrating telemedicine visits into the routine discharge process, said Marisa L. Brant, MD, a neonatology fellow at the hospital.
The researchers assessed whether telemedicine visits could ease the transition from neonatal intensive care to home care, respond adequately to caregivers’ needs during that transition, reduce emergency department visits and readmissions, and detect and address any potential problems. The visits also provided an opportunity for feedback on caregivers’ experiences during discharge.
The 92 patients all were medically complex infants who went home with respiratory or feeding equipment, surgical sites and/or complex medication administration. For example, 28 infants had been sent home with a nasogastric tube, 13 had a gastrostomy tube, and 13 had an apnea monitor. Overall, participants had been discharged with an average 2.3 medications and 4.8 scheduled subspecialty follow-up appointments.
The most common conditions among the participants were gastrointestinal disease, neurologic disease, and congenital diaphragmatic hernia or lung lesions. Other conditions included omphalocele, genetic disorders, tracheoesophageal fistula or esophageal atresia and chronic lung disease, or another respiratory disease, Dr. Brant reported at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting.
Families could enroll in the study only if they had a smart device (such as a tablet) and wireless Internet access at home. One week after the infant’s discharge from the NICU, the caregivers received one telemedicine visit with a team that included neonatologists, neonatal fellows, nurse practitioners, and a telemedicine coordinator or support staffer. During the visit, the providers observed the infant and the home environment, and evaluated care practices, including tube feedings, respiratory support, management of surgical wound sites, and administration of medications.
The providers also reviewed how to use the medical equipment, gathered follow-up information about the child’s health, and answered caregivers’ questions. The providers did not bill for telemedicine visits since it was part of a pilot study, but the participants did need to reside in Pennsylvania or New Jersey to meet provider licensing regulations.
Among the 93 telemedicine visits, half (50%) prevented the family from calling or visiting a provider, and 12% of them led to an earlier follow-up appointment for the child. During the video observations, providers addressed 14 issues related to the child’s sleep environment, respiratory status, surgical sites, or dermatological issues. Among 78 total concerns identified in the visits, 35% related to the surgical site, 33% related to feeding, 19% related to respiratory concerns, and 13% related to medication administration.
The provider team also asked families during the visit about their experiences during discharge. A quarter of the families (26%) said they needed more parental education during discharge. In addition, 14% mentioned problems with scheduling follow-up appointments, and 12% had problems related to case management and insurance. Other issues raised by parents related to home equipment, early intervention, home feeding or medications, and diagnostic logistics.
In subsequent satisfaction surveys filled out by caregivers about the telemedicine visit itself, the median rating was 94.5 on a scale of 0 (not at all satisfied) to 100 (extremely satisfied). The overall intervention was 92% successful in its completion. The only follow-up telemedicine visits that did not occur resulted from malfunctioning wireless connection or a mobile app problem. On a scale of 1 to 100 (best), caregivers rated the video quality as an average 78, the Internet reliability as 79, and the ease of using the camera as 91. One of the biggest benefits of the intervention, Dr. Brant pointed out, is that using telemedicine bypasses some of the geographic and time-related obstacles that can occur with follow-ups.
Dr. Brant had no relevant financial disclosures and did not report using any external funding.
FROM PAS 17
Key clinical point:
Major finding: Telemedicine visits prevented 50% of participants from calling or visiting a provider and led 12% of families to bring infants in sooner than originally scheduled.
Data source: The findings are based on a pilot project at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia involving 93 medically complex infants discharged from the NICU with medical equipment, surgical sites, and/or complex medication administration.
Disclosures: Dr. Brant had no relevant financial disclosures and did not report external funding.
Early literacy assessment tool shows promise for screening preschool children
SAN FRANCISCO – The 10-item Early Literary Assessment Tool (ELSAT) used during regular pediatrician appointments in the first 4 years of life has shown promise in screening preschool children for delayed literacy skills that could result in later reading problems, based on a pilot study conducted in the preschool setting.
ELSAT “can be completed by a clinician [in the primary care setting] in less than a minute and can be incorporated into the Reach Out and Read intervention. An important next step in our research is to study the feasibility of the ELSAT within primary care visits and obtain feedback from clinicians about the ease of administration and value to their practice,” said Sai N. Iyer, MD, a developmental-behavioral pediatric fellow at the University of California, San Diego.
A “striking and surprising” finding was the marked difference in early literacy skills between children in a Head Start public preschool program and children from private schools. Public preschoolers had significantly poorer scores in the established language measurement tools than did their private preschool counterparts (Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test: 98 vs. 116; Get Ready to Read–Revised: 91 vs. 107; Comprehensive Test of Phonological Processing–2: 92 vs. 106; all P less than .01).
The initial 40-item ELSAT addressed three key domains of early literacy skills: knowledge and awareness of printed words, knowledge of letters, and recognition of word sounds. The observational study had two phases. ELSAT was developed and refined in the pilot phase, with validation against three aforementioned reference measures in the validation phase. The process whittled the test down to 10 items, with the same three domains represented. Comparisons were between the individual measures and a composite of the three.
The 10-item ELSAT correlated with each of the reference measures and with the composite of the three measures of early literacy (Pearson’s correlation, 810; P less than .01; Cronbach’s alpha [a measure of internal consistency] of .852). A cut-off ELSAT score of less than or equal to 5 predicted a “below average” score in any of the three reference measures and identified delayed literacy with a sensitivity of 92% and an acceptable specificity of 64%, Dr. Iyer explained during her presentation at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting.
Language skills acquired during the first few years of life in the home and preschool settings lay the path for the development of more sophisticated reading skills, including decoding and comprehension beginning in grade 1. “Research has shown that about 40% of children enter kindergarten behind their peers in important early literacy skills. This gap widens with time, and the cost of catching them up far exceeds the cost of screening and early intervention. Many studies have demonstrated that effective early interventions improve the long-term outcomes for children who are at risk for later reading failure. Children who are reading at a below grade level by 4th grade are unlikely to catch up. Low levels of literacy have an impact on later educational and employment opportunities and set up a cycle of social and economic disadvantage that can have transgenerational effects,” Dr. Iyer said.
While parent-completed questionnaires are a convenient way to perform developmental screening, they are limited by the health literacy of the parents and other factors. Furthermore, while some preschools perform assessments, not all children attend preschools. This prompted Dr. Iyer and colleagues to think about developing a more objective screening strategy, with which a clinician could do the brief assessment. “All preschool children do see their pediatrician/primary care provider for vaccinations that are required before kindergarten. This makes the primary care setting an ideal opportunity to screen these children,” said Dr. Iyer.
During the question-and-answer session, an attendee described the data concerning the dichotomy in the test results between the public and private preschools as “some of the most impressive and depressing I’ve seen in this area.”
In a later interview, Dr. Iyer commented that, while the results in the study were not entirely new or surprising, “it was remarkable that we were able to demonstrate such significant differences in a sample of children enrolled in a high-quality preschool. Without specific screening and intervention, these early literacy delays would go unrecognized and increase the risk of poor academic outcomes for these high-risk children. The children were all in some type of preschool environment. Throughout the country, there are many children from low-income families who are not able to access preschool education. Although we did not test these children in our study, it is likely that the gaps between these children and their more advantaged peers are even higher. The pediatrician’s office may be the only place for these children to receive early literacy screening and anticipatory guidance on reading readiness.”
The sponsor of the study was the University of California, San Diego. The study was funded by the 2015 Academic Pediatric Association Young Investigator Award and by Reach Out and Read. Dr. Iyer had no relevant financial disclosures to report.
SAN FRANCISCO – The 10-item Early Literary Assessment Tool (ELSAT) used during regular pediatrician appointments in the first 4 years of life has shown promise in screening preschool children for delayed literacy skills that could result in later reading problems, based on a pilot study conducted in the preschool setting.
ELSAT “can be completed by a clinician [in the primary care setting] in less than a minute and can be incorporated into the Reach Out and Read intervention. An important next step in our research is to study the feasibility of the ELSAT within primary care visits and obtain feedback from clinicians about the ease of administration and value to their practice,” said Sai N. Iyer, MD, a developmental-behavioral pediatric fellow at the University of California, San Diego.
A “striking and surprising” finding was the marked difference in early literacy skills between children in a Head Start public preschool program and children from private schools. Public preschoolers had significantly poorer scores in the established language measurement tools than did their private preschool counterparts (Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test: 98 vs. 116; Get Ready to Read–Revised: 91 vs. 107; Comprehensive Test of Phonological Processing–2: 92 vs. 106; all P less than .01).
The initial 40-item ELSAT addressed three key domains of early literacy skills: knowledge and awareness of printed words, knowledge of letters, and recognition of word sounds. The observational study had two phases. ELSAT was developed and refined in the pilot phase, with validation against three aforementioned reference measures in the validation phase. The process whittled the test down to 10 items, with the same three domains represented. Comparisons were between the individual measures and a composite of the three.
The 10-item ELSAT correlated with each of the reference measures and with the composite of the three measures of early literacy (Pearson’s correlation, 810; P less than .01; Cronbach’s alpha [a measure of internal consistency] of .852). A cut-off ELSAT score of less than or equal to 5 predicted a “below average” score in any of the three reference measures and identified delayed literacy with a sensitivity of 92% and an acceptable specificity of 64%, Dr. Iyer explained during her presentation at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting.
Language skills acquired during the first few years of life in the home and preschool settings lay the path for the development of more sophisticated reading skills, including decoding and comprehension beginning in grade 1. “Research has shown that about 40% of children enter kindergarten behind their peers in important early literacy skills. This gap widens with time, and the cost of catching them up far exceeds the cost of screening and early intervention. Many studies have demonstrated that effective early interventions improve the long-term outcomes for children who are at risk for later reading failure. Children who are reading at a below grade level by 4th grade are unlikely to catch up. Low levels of literacy have an impact on later educational and employment opportunities and set up a cycle of social and economic disadvantage that can have transgenerational effects,” Dr. Iyer said.
While parent-completed questionnaires are a convenient way to perform developmental screening, they are limited by the health literacy of the parents and other factors. Furthermore, while some preschools perform assessments, not all children attend preschools. This prompted Dr. Iyer and colleagues to think about developing a more objective screening strategy, with which a clinician could do the brief assessment. “All preschool children do see their pediatrician/primary care provider for vaccinations that are required before kindergarten. This makes the primary care setting an ideal opportunity to screen these children,” said Dr. Iyer.
During the question-and-answer session, an attendee described the data concerning the dichotomy in the test results between the public and private preschools as “some of the most impressive and depressing I’ve seen in this area.”
In a later interview, Dr. Iyer commented that, while the results in the study were not entirely new or surprising, “it was remarkable that we were able to demonstrate such significant differences in a sample of children enrolled in a high-quality preschool. Without specific screening and intervention, these early literacy delays would go unrecognized and increase the risk of poor academic outcomes for these high-risk children. The children were all in some type of preschool environment. Throughout the country, there are many children from low-income families who are not able to access preschool education. Although we did not test these children in our study, it is likely that the gaps between these children and their more advantaged peers are even higher. The pediatrician’s office may be the only place for these children to receive early literacy screening and anticipatory guidance on reading readiness.”
The sponsor of the study was the University of California, San Diego. The study was funded by the 2015 Academic Pediatric Association Young Investigator Award and by Reach Out and Read. Dr. Iyer had no relevant financial disclosures to report.
SAN FRANCISCO – The 10-item Early Literary Assessment Tool (ELSAT) used during regular pediatrician appointments in the first 4 years of life has shown promise in screening preschool children for delayed literacy skills that could result in later reading problems, based on a pilot study conducted in the preschool setting.
ELSAT “can be completed by a clinician [in the primary care setting] in less than a minute and can be incorporated into the Reach Out and Read intervention. An important next step in our research is to study the feasibility of the ELSAT within primary care visits and obtain feedback from clinicians about the ease of administration and value to their practice,” said Sai N. Iyer, MD, a developmental-behavioral pediatric fellow at the University of California, San Diego.
A “striking and surprising” finding was the marked difference in early literacy skills between children in a Head Start public preschool program and children from private schools. Public preschoolers had significantly poorer scores in the established language measurement tools than did their private preschool counterparts (Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test: 98 vs. 116; Get Ready to Read–Revised: 91 vs. 107; Comprehensive Test of Phonological Processing–2: 92 vs. 106; all P less than .01).
The initial 40-item ELSAT addressed three key domains of early literacy skills: knowledge and awareness of printed words, knowledge of letters, and recognition of word sounds. The observational study had two phases. ELSAT was developed and refined in the pilot phase, with validation against three aforementioned reference measures in the validation phase. The process whittled the test down to 10 items, with the same three domains represented. Comparisons were between the individual measures and a composite of the three.
The 10-item ELSAT correlated with each of the reference measures and with the composite of the three measures of early literacy (Pearson’s correlation, 810; P less than .01; Cronbach’s alpha [a measure of internal consistency] of .852). A cut-off ELSAT score of less than or equal to 5 predicted a “below average” score in any of the three reference measures and identified delayed literacy with a sensitivity of 92% and an acceptable specificity of 64%, Dr. Iyer explained during her presentation at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting.
Language skills acquired during the first few years of life in the home and preschool settings lay the path for the development of more sophisticated reading skills, including decoding and comprehension beginning in grade 1. “Research has shown that about 40% of children enter kindergarten behind their peers in important early literacy skills. This gap widens with time, and the cost of catching them up far exceeds the cost of screening and early intervention. Many studies have demonstrated that effective early interventions improve the long-term outcomes for children who are at risk for later reading failure. Children who are reading at a below grade level by 4th grade are unlikely to catch up. Low levels of literacy have an impact on later educational and employment opportunities and set up a cycle of social and economic disadvantage that can have transgenerational effects,” Dr. Iyer said.
While parent-completed questionnaires are a convenient way to perform developmental screening, they are limited by the health literacy of the parents and other factors. Furthermore, while some preschools perform assessments, not all children attend preschools. This prompted Dr. Iyer and colleagues to think about developing a more objective screening strategy, with which a clinician could do the brief assessment. “All preschool children do see their pediatrician/primary care provider for vaccinations that are required before kindergarten. This makes the primary care setting an ideal opportunity to screen these children,” said Dr. Iyer.
During the question-and-answer session, an attendee described the data concerning the dichotomy in the test results between the public and private preschools as “some of the most impressive and depressing I’ve seen in this area.”
In a later interview, Dr. Iyer commented that, while the results in the study were not entirely new or surprising, “it was remarkable that we were able to demonstrate such significant differences in a sample of children enrolled in a high-quality preschool. Without specific screening and intervention, these early literacy delays would go unrecognized and increase the risk of poor academic outcomes for these high-risk children. The children were all in some type of preschool environment. Throughout the country, there are many children from low-income families who are not able to access preschool education. Although we did not test these children in our study, it is likely that the gaps between these children and their more advantaged peers are even higher. The pediatrician’s office may be the only place for these children to receive early literacy screening and anticipatory guidance on reading readiness.”
The sponsor of the study was the University of California, San Diego. The study was funded by the 2015 Academic Pediatric Association Young Investigator Award and by Reach Out and Read. Dr. Iyer had no relevant financial disclosures to report.
AT PAS 2017
Key clinical point:
Major finding: The 10-item ELSAT correlated with each of the reference measures and with the composite of the three measures of early literacy (Pearson’s correlation, 810; P less than .01; Cronbach’s alpha [a measure of internal consistency] of .852).
Data source: An observational study of 54-month-old children in five public preschools (n = 61) and two private preschools (n = 35) in San Diego.
Disclosures: The sponsor of the study was the University of California, San Diego. The study was funded by the 2015 Academic Pediatric Association Young Investigator Award and by Reach Out and Read. Dr. Iyer had no relevant financial disclosures to report.
Caffeine therapy of VLBW neonates reduces later motor impairment
SAN FRANCISCO – The 11-year follow-up results of the Caffeine for Apnea of Prematurity randomized, placebo-controlled trial has established the benefits of methylated xanthine therapy in the form of caffeine for very-low-birth-weight (VLBW) neonates in lessening the risk of motor impairment.
“The latest findings bolster the value of caffeine therapy to address apnea of prematurity in VLBW neonates. The CAP trial has provided compelling evidence for the use of caffeine even before this latest finding of improved motor function at age 11 years,” said presenter and the CAP trial’s principal investigator Barbara Schmidt, MD, of McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont.
At least 5 of every 1,000 live-born babies are very premature with a VLBW. Up of 40% die or survive with lasting disabilities. One cause of mortality or disability is apnea. Apnea can be lessened by treatment with methylxanthines such as caffeine, she noted. However, at the time the CAP trial began, it was unclear whether the therapy posed a danger by worsening the damage caused by lack of oxygen.
“Very few studies have followed more recent cohorts of very preterm infants to middle school age. Therefore, it was difficult to anticipate actual rates of functional impairment, and the possible effect of caffeine on those rates,” said Dr. Schmidt.
As reported about a decade ago, the CAP trial involving VLBW infants randomized to caffeine therapy or placebo established the short-term safety and effectiveness of the therapy in terms of reducing cerebral palsy and cognitive delay (N Engl J Med. 2007;357:1893-902).
Follow-ups at 18 months and 5 years revealed the benefits of caffeine therapy in reducing the rates of bronchopulmonary dysplasia, severe retinopathy, and neurodevelopmental disability. The present follow-up data assessed academic performance, motor function, and behavior in 1,202 children with a median age of 11 years. Of these, 602 had received caffeine therapy and 600 had been randomized to the placebo group. Data at age 11 years was available for 457 and 463 of the children randomized to caffeine therapy or placebo, respectively.
The primary outcome was functional impairment, which was indicated by at least one of poor academic performance (with at least one standard score more than two standard deviations below the mean on the Wide Range Achievement Test, 4th edition), motor impairment (percentile rank of 5 or less on the Movement Assessment Battery for Children, Second Edition), and behavior problems (Total Problem T score more than two standard deviations above the mean on the Child Behavior Checklist).
Functional impairment was evident in 145 the 457 (32%) children who had received caffeine therapy and 174 of the 463 (38%) who had not. The rates of 32% and 38% were statistically similar (P = .07). In the individual functional outcomes, the caffeine and placebo groups also were similar in terms of poor academic performance (14% vs. 13%; P = .58) and behavior (11% vs. 8%, respectively; P = .22).
However, caffeine therapy was associated with a reduced risk of motor impairment at age 11 years, compared with those in the placebo group (20% vs. 28%, respectively; odds ratio [OR], 0.66; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.48-0.90; P = .009). The number of children needed to treat to lessen motor impairment in one child was 13 (95% CI, 8-42).
“Caffeine therapy for apnea of prematurity did not significantly reduce the combined rate of academic, motor, and behavioral impairments at age 11 years. However, caffeine therapy reduced the risk of motor impairment 11 years later,” said Dr. Schmidt. Whether caffeine therapy using higher doses or longer treatment duration is equally risk free is uncertain and further studies, which are not planned, would be needed, she said.
These 11-year follow-up findings of the CAP trial were published online in JAMA Pediatrics (2017, Apr 24. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2017.0238).
The sponsor of study was McMaster University. The study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia. Dr. Schmidt had no relevant financial disclosures to report.
SAN FRANCISCO – The 11-year follow-up results of the Caffeine for Apnea of Prematurity randomized, placebo-controlled trial has established the benefits of methylated xanthine therapy in the form of caffeine for very-low-birth-weight (VLBW) neonates in lessening the risk of motor impairment.
“The latest findings bolster the value of caffeine therapy to address apnea of prematurity in VLBW neonates. The CAP trial has provided compelling evidence for the use of caffeine even before this latest finding of improved motor function at age 11 years,” said presenter and the CAP trial’s principal investigator Barbara Schmidt, MD, of McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont.
At least 5 of every 1,000 live-born babies are very premature with a VLBW. Up of 40% die or survive with lasting disabilities. One cause of mortality or disability is apnea. Apnea can be lessened by treatment with methylxanthines such as caffeine, she noted. However, at the time the CAP trial began, it was unclear whether the therapy posed a danger by worsening the damage caused by lack of oxygen.
“Very few studies have followed more recent cohorts of very preterm infants to middle school age. Therefore, it was difficult to anticipate actual rates of functional impairment, and the possible effect of caffeine on those rates,” said Dr. Schmidt.
As reported about a decade ago, the CAP trial involving VLBW infants randomized to caffeine therapy or placebo established the short-term safety and effectiveness of the therapy in terms of reducing cerebral palsy and cognitive delay (N Engl J Med. 2007;357:1893-902).
Follow-ups at 18 months and 5 years revealed the benefits of caffeine therapy in reducing the rates of bronchopulmonary dysplasia, severe retinopathy, and neurodevelopmental disability. The present follow-up data assessed academic performance, motor function, and behavior in 1,202 children with a median age of 11 years. Of these, 602 had received caffeine therapy and 600 had been randomized to the placebo group. Data at age 11 years was available for 457 and 463 of the children randomized to caffeine therapy or placebo, respectively.
The primary outcome was functional impairment, which was indicated by at least one of poor academic performance (with at least one standard score more than two standard deviations below the mean on the Wide Range Achievement Test, 4th edition), motor impairment (percentile rank of 5 or less on the Movement Assessment Battery for Children, Second Edition), and behavior problems (Total Problem T score more than two standard deviations above the mean on the Child Behavior Checklist).
Functional impairment was evident in 145 the 457 (32%) children who had received caffeine therapy and 174 of the 463 (38%) who had not. The rates of 32% and 38% were statistically similar (P = .07). In the individual functional outcomes, the caffeine and placebo groups also were similar in terms of poor academic performance (14% vs. 13%; P = .58) and behavior (11% vs. 8%, respectively; P = .22).
However, caffeine therapy was associated with a reduced risk of motor impairment at age 11 years, compared with those in the placebo group (20% vs. 28%, respectively; odds ratio [OR], 0.66; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.48-0.90; P = .009). The number of children needed to treat to lessen motor impairment in one child was 13 (95% CI, 8-42).
“Caffeine therapy for apnea of prematurity did not significantly reduce the combined rate of academic, motor, and behavioral impairments at age 11 years. However, caffeine therapy reduced the risk of motor impairment 11 years later,” said Dr. Schmidt. Whether caffeine therapy using higher doses or longer treatment duration is equally risk free is uncertain and further studies, which are not planned, would be needed, she said.
These 11-year follow-up findings of the CAP trial were published online in JAMA Pediatrics (2017, Apr 24. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2017.0238).
The sponsor of study was McMaster University. The study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia. Dr. Schmidt had no relevant financial disclosures to report.
SAN FRANCISCO – The 11-year follow-up results of the Caffeine for Apnea of Prematurity randomized, placebo-controlled trial has established the benefits of methylated xanthine therapy in the form of caffeine for very-low-birth-weight (VLBW) neonates in lessening the risk of motor impairment.
“The latest findings bolster the value of caffeine therapy to address apnea of prematurity in VLBW neonates. The CAP trial has provided compelling evidence for the use of caffeine even before this latest finding of improved motor function at age 11 years,” said presenter and the CAP trial’s principal investigator Barbara Schmidt, MD, of McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont.
At least 5 of every 1,000 live-born babies are very premature with a VLBW. Up of 40% die or survive with lasting disabilities. One cause of mortality or disability is apnea. Apnea can be lessened by treatment with methylxanthines such as caffeine, she noted. However, at the time the CAP trial began, it was unclear whether the therapy posed a danger by worsening the damage caused by lack of oxygen.
“Very few studies have followed more recent cohorts of very preterm infants to middle school age. Therefore, it was difficult to anticipate actual rates of functional impairment, and the possible effect of caffeine on those rates,” said Dr. Schmidt.
As reported about a decade ago, the CAP trial involving VLBW infants randomized to caffeine therapy or placebo established the short-term safety and effectiveness of the therapy in terms of reducing cerebral palsy and cognitive delay (N Engl J Med. 2007;357:1893-902).
Follow-ups at 18 months and 5 years revealed the benefits of caffeine therapy in reducing the rates of bronchopulmonary dysplasia, severe retinopathy, and neurodevelopmental disability. The present follow-up data assessed academic performance, motor function, and behavior in 1,202 children with a median age of 11 years. Of these, 602 had received caffeine therapy and 600 had been randomized to the placebo group. Data at age 11 years was available for 457 and 463 of the children randomized to caffeine therapy or placebo, respectively.
The primary outcome was functional impairment, which was indicated by at least one of poor academic performance (with at least one standard score more than two standard deviations below the mean on the Wide Range Achievement Test, 4th edition), motor impairment (percentile rank of 5 or less on the Movement Assessment Battery for Children, Second Edition), and behavior problems (Total Problem T score more than two standard deviations above the mean on the Child Behavior Checklist).
Functional impairment was evident in 145 the 457 (32%) children who had received caffeine therapy and 174 of the 463 (38%) who had not. The rates of 32% and 38% were statistically similar (P = .07). In the individual functional outcomes, the caffeine and placebo groups also were similar in terms of poor academic performance (14% vs. 13%; P = .58) and behavior (11% vs. 8%, respectively; P = .22).
However, caffeine therapy was associated with a reduced risk of motor impairment at age 11 years, compared with those in the placebo group (20% vs. 28%, respectively; odds ratio [OR], 0.66; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.48-0.90; P = .009). The number of children needed to treat to lessen motor impairment in one child was 13 (95% CI, 8-42).
“Caffeine therapy for apnea of prematurity did not significantly reduce the combined rate of academic, motor, and behavioral impairments at age 11 years. However, caffeine therapy reduced the risk of motor impairment 11 years later,” said Dr. Schmidt. Whether caffeine therapy using higher doses or longer treatment duration is equally risk free is uncertain and further studies, which are not planned, would be needed, she said.
These 11-year follow-up findings of the CAP trial were published online in JAMA Pediatrics (2017, Apr 24. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2017.0238).
The sponsor of study was McMaster University. The study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia. Dr. Schmidt had no relevant financial disclosures to report.
AT PAS 17
Key clinical point:
Major finding: At the 11-year follow-up, motor impairment was identified in 20% of those who received caffeine therapy versus 28% of those in the placebo group (P = .009).
Data source: Multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled trial (NCT00182312).
Disclosures: The sponsor of study was McMaster University. The study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia. Dr. Schmidt had no relevant financial disclosures to report.
Drainage, irrigation, and fibrinolytic therapy held safe, effective for PHVD
SAN FRANCISCO – The 10-year follow-up of neonates treated for posthemorrhagic ventricular dilatation (PHVD) has demonstrated the long-term success of drainage, irrigation, and fibrinolytic therapy (DRIFT), with a cognitive advantage in the now school-age children evident, compared with those neonates who had not received the therapy.
“Children in the DRIFT group had a 23-point cognitive quotient advantage and were nine times more likely to be alive without severe cognitive disability at 10 years,” presenter and DRIFT investigator Karen Luyt, MBChB, PhD, of the University of Bristol and St. Michael’s Hospital, Bristol, England, said at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting.
“DRIFT is the first intervention to reduce long-term disability after PHVD. This life changing intervention should be developed as standard care for preterm infants with PHVD,” she said.
PHVD carries a high risk of disabilities in cognition and movement. DRIFT was developed as a way to wash out the ventricles in the brain to clear the effects of bleeding, with the goal of reducing neurodevelopmental disability. In the technique, catheters are inserted into the affected ventricles and are used to deliver an anti-clotting agent (alteplase) and to drain the bloody fluid. The catheters remain in place for a time as a conduit for artificial cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) containing antibiotics.
In the DRIFT trial, 77 preterm infants were randomized to DRIFT (n = 39) or the standard treatment of siphoning off cerebrospinal fluid to restrict brain expansion (n = 38). At 2 years, the DRIFT group displayed fewer cases of severe disability and cognitive disability, and death (Pediatrics. 2010 Apr;125[4]:e852-8).
Dr. Luyt summarized the final 10-year data from 52 school-age children (28 treated using DRIFT and 24 treated in the standard manner). The primary outcomes in the school-age children were cognitive quotient (CQ) and survival without severe cognitive disability. Secondary outcomes included visual function, sensory and motor disabilities, and emotional or behavior problems.
The age at the time of treatment randomization was 19 days in the DRIFT group and 19 days in the standard group. The DRIFT group was composed of more males (79% vs. 63%) and newborns with lower birth weight (336 vs. 535 grams). The gestational age and the prevalence of grade 4 intraventricular hemorrhage were similar between the groups.
DRIFT increased cognitive ability at 10 years (P = .096). Adjustment for gender, birth weight, and grade of intraventricular hemorrhage strengthened this association, with the DRIFT group having an average advantage in CQ score of 23.5 points (P = .009), which translated to a 2.5-year advantage in cognitive ability. When the data was further adjusted by ruling out the three children (two in the DRIFT group and one in the standard treatment group) who died between the 2- and 10-year follow-ups, the CQ score advantage remained (20 points; P = .029).
The other primary outcome of survival without severe cognitive disability also favored DRIFT, with an unadjusted odds ratio (OR) of 3.3 (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.1-10.4 (P = .037) and adjusted (as above) OR of 8.9 (95% CI, 1.9-42.3; P = .006). Fewer children in the DRIFT group were attending schools with an expertise in special needs (OR, 0.27; 95% CI, 0.07-1.05; P = .059). No differences between the groups were evident for the secondary outcomes.
The number needed to treat to prevent death or severe cognitive disability was four.
Dr. Luyt’s recommendation that DRIFT become the standard of care for neonatal intraventricular hemorrhage comes with the caveat of increased secondary bleeding, which caused the trial to be halted after a planned external safety monitoring review. Children who already had been treated were followed up, with no further recruitment. In her response to a question from the audience regarding her endorsement of DRIFT despite the trial’s halt, Dr. Luyt pointed to the comparable safety profiles of the two groups, the superior outcomes in the DRIFT group, and the knowledge that modifications made to the technique in the intervening years have reduced the possibility of secondary bleeds.
The sponsor of study was Dr. Birgit Whitman of the University of Bristol. The study was funded by the National Institute of Health’s Health Technology Assessment Programme. Dr. Luyt disclosed the off-label use of alteplase.
SAN FRANCISCO – The 10-year follow-up of neonates treated for posthemorrhagic ventricular dilatation (PHVD) has demonstrated the long-term success of drainage, irrigation, and fibrinolytic therapy (DRIFT), with a cognitive advantage in the now school-age children evident, compared with those neonates who had not received the therapy.
“Children in the DRIFT group had a 23-point cognitive quotient advantage and were nine times more likely to be alive without severe cognitive disability at 10 years,” presenter and DRIFT investigator Karen Luyt, MBChB, PhD, of the University of Bristol and St. Michael’s Hospital, Bristol, England, said at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting.
“DRIFT is the first intervention to reduce long-term disability after PHVD. This life changing intervention should be developed as standard care for preterm infants with PHVD,” she said.
PHVD carries a high risk of disabilities in cognition and movement. DRIFT was developed as a way to wash out the ventricles in the brain to clear the effects of bleeding, with the goal of reducing neurodevelopmental disability. In the technique, catheters are inserted into the affected ventricles and are used to deliver an anti-clotting agent (alteplase) and to drain the bloody fluid. The catheters remain in place for a time as a conduit for artificial cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) containing antibiotics.
In the DRIFT trial, 77 preterm infants were randomized to DRIFT (n = 39) or the standard treatment of siphoning off cerebrospinal fluid to restrict brain expansion (n = 38). At 2 years, the DRIFT group displayed fewer cases of severe disability and cognitive disability, and death (Pediatrics. 2010 Apr;125[4]:e852-8).
Dr. Luyt summarized the final 10-year data from 52 school-age children (28 treated using DRIFT and 24 treated in the standard manner). The primary outcomes in the school-age children were cognitive quotient (CQ) and survival without severe cognitive disability. Secondary outcomes included visual function, sensory and motor disabilities, and emotional or behavior problems.
The age at the time of treatment randomization was 19 days in the DRIFT group and 19 days in the standard group. The DRIFT group was composed of more males (79% vs. 63%) and newborns with lower birth weight (336 vs. 535 grams). The gestational age and the prevalence of grade 4 intraventricular hemorrhage were similar between the groups.
DRIFT increased cognitive ability at 10 years (P = .096). Adjustment for gender, birth weight, and grade of intraventricular hemorrhage strengthened this association, with the DRIFT group having an average advantage in CQ score of 23.5 points (P = .009), which translated to a 2.5-year advantage in cognitive ability. When the data was further adjusted by ruling out the three children (two in the DRIFT group and one in the standard treatment group) who died between the 2- and 10-year follow-ups, the CQ score advantage remained (20 points; P = .029).
The other primary outcome of survival without severe cognitive disability also favored DRIFT, with an unadjusted odds ratio (OR) of 3.3 (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.1-10.4 (P = .037) and adjusted (as above) OR of 8.9 (95% CI, 1.9-42.3; P = .006). Fewer children in the DRIFT group were attending schools with an expertise in special needs (OR, 0.27; 95% CI, 0.07-1.05; P = .059). No differences between the groups were evident for the secondary outcomes.
The number needed to treat to prevent death or severe cognitive disability was four.
Dr. Luyt’s recommendation that DRIFT become the standard of care for neonatal intraventricular hemorrhage comes with the caveat of increased secondary bleeding, which caused the trial to be halted after a planned external safety monitoring review. Children who already had been treated were followed up, with no further recruitment. In her response to a question from the audience regarding her endorsement of DRIFT despite the trial’s halt, Dr. Luyt pointed to the comparable safety profiles of the two groups, the superior outcomes in the DRIFT group, and the knowledge that modifications made to the technique in the intervening years have reduced the possibility of secondary bleeds.
The sponsor of study was Dr. Birgit Whitman of the University of Bristol. The study was funded by the National Institute of Health’s Health Technology Assessment Programme. Dr. Luyt disclosed the off-label use of alteplase.
SAN FRANCISCO – The 10-year follow-up of neonates treated for posthemorrhagic ventricular dilatation (PHVD) has demonstrated the long-term success of drainage, irrigation, and fibrinolytic therapy (DRIFT), with a cognitive advantage in the now school-age children evident, compared with those neonates who had not received the therapy.
“Children in the DRIFT group had a 23-point cognitive quotient advantage and were nine times more likely to be alive without severe cognitive disability at 10 years,” presenter and DRIFT investigator Karen Luyt, MBChB, PhD, of the University of Bristol and St. Michael’s Hospital, Bristol, England, said at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting.
“DRIFT is the first intervention to reduce long-term disability after PHVD. This life changing intervention should be developed as standard care for preterm infants with PHVD,” she said.
PHVD carries a high risk of disabilities in cognition and movement. DRIFT was developed as a way to wash out the ventricles in the brain to clear the effects of bleeding, with the goal of reducing neurodevelopmental disability. In the technique, catheters are inserted into the affected ventricles and are used to deliver an anti-clotting agent (alteplase) and to drain the bloody fluid. The catheters remain in place for a time as a conduit for artificial cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) containing antibiotics.
In the DRIFT trial, 77 preterm infants were randomized to DRIFT (n = 39) or the standard treatment of siphoning off cerebrospinal fluid to restrict brain expansion (n = 38). At 2 years, the DRIFT group displayed fewer cases of severe disability and cognitive disability, and death (Pediatrics. 2010 Apr;125[4]:e852-8).
Dr. Luyt summarized the final 10-year data from 52 school-age children (28 treated using DRIFT and 24 treated in the standard manner). The primary outcomes in the school-age children were cognitive quotient (CQ) and survival without severe cognitive disability. Secondary outcomes included visual function, sensory and motor disabilities, and emotional or behavior problems.
The age at the time of treatment randomization was 19 days in the DRIFT group and 19 days in the standard group. The DRIFT group was composed of more males (79% vs. 63%) and newborns with lower birth weight (336 vs. 535 grams). The gestational age and the prevalence of grade 4 intraventricular hemorrhage were similar between the groups.
DRIFT increased cognitive ability at 10 years (P = .096). Adjustment for gender, birth weight, and grade of intraventricular hemorrhage strengthened this association, with the DRIFT group having an average advantage in CQ score of 23.5 points (P = .009), which translated to a 2.5-year advantage in cognitive ability. When the data was further adjusted by ruling out the three children (two in the DRIFT group and one in the standard treatment group) who died between the 2- and 10-year follow-ups, the CQ score advantage remained (20 points; P = .029).
The other primary outcome of survival without severe cognitive disability also favored DRIFT, with an unadjusted odds ratio (OR) of 3.3 (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.1-10.4 (P = .037) and adjusted (as above) OR of 8.9 (95% CI, 1.9-42.3; P = .006). Fewer children in the DRIFT group were attending schools with an expertise in special needs (OR, 0.27; 95% CI, 0.07-1.05; P = .059). No differences between the groups were evident for the secondary outcomes.
The number needed to treat to prevent death or severe cognitive disability was four.
Dr. Luyt’s recommendation that DRIFT become the standard of care for neonatal intraventricular hemorrhage comes with the caveat of increased secondary bleeding, which caused the trial to be halted after a planned external safety monitoring review. Children who already had been treated were followed up, with no further recruitment. In her response to a question from the audience regarding her endorsement of DRIFT despite the trial’s halt, Dr. Luyt pointed to the comparable safety profiles of the two groups, the superior outcomes in the DRIFT group, and the knowledge that modifications made to the technique in the intervening years have reduced the possibility of secondary bleeds.
The sponsor of study was Dr. Birgit Whitman of the University of Bristol. The study was funded by the National Institute of Health’s Health Technology Assessment Programme. Dr. Luyt disclosed the off-label use of alteplase.
AT PAS 17
Key clinical point: The 10-year follow-up data from the Drainage, Irrigation, and Fibrinolytic Therapy (DRIFT) study has confirmed the long-term safety and effectiveness of the intervention in treatment of preterm intraventricular hemorrhage.
Major finding: The DRIFT group had an average advantage in cognitive quotient score of 23.5 points (P = .009), translating to a 2.5 year advantage in cognitive ability.
Data source: Randomized controlled trial of 52 10-year-old children from the DRIFT study.
Disclosures: The sponsor of study was Dr. Birgit Whitman of the University of Bristol. The study was funded by the National Institute of Health’s Health Technology Assessment Programme. Dr. Luyt disclosed the off-label use of alteplase.