Co-occurring ADHD in young children with ASD: Precursors, detection, neural signatures, and early treatment
Project Number1P50HD093074-01
Former Number1P50MH114188-01
Contact PI/Project LeaderDAWSON, GERALDINE Other PIs
Awardee OrganizationDUKE UNIVERSITY
Description
Abstract Text
ABSTRACT – Co-occurring ADHD in young children with ASD: Precursors, detection, neural signatures, and
early treatment
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) occurs in ~40-60% of individuals with autism spectrum disorder
(ASD) and substantially contributes to poorer clinical outcomes. Yet, very little research has focused on the
overlap of ASD and ADHD during early childhood. Thus, little is known about how these two conditions co-
emerge early in life. Given the high prevalence and clinical impact of the comorbidity of ASD and ADHD, the
overall goal of the Duke Autism Center of Excellence is to characterize how co-occurring ADHD influences
early screening, neural signatures, developmental trajectories, and response to early treatment of young
children with ASD. Project 1 will characterize risk factors for and emergence of co-occurring ADHD symptoms
in young children at risk for ASD and examine how these symptoms influence early detection and progression
of ASD. This project will clarify why children who have co-occurring ADHD are diagnosed at a much later age
and inform more effective early detection strategies. Following a large sample of toddlers receiving routine care
in Duke pediatric primary clinics (N = ~ 2800 patients/year), Project 1 will prospectively identify children at risk
for ASD and collect data on risk factors, ADHD, and developmental outcomes. Project 2 will elucidate shared
and distinct neural signatures and attention-related biomarkers related to ASD and ADHD, examine the
functional impact of co-occurring ADHD in young children with ASD, and identify precursor characteristics
during infancy that are predictive of later emergence of comorbid ASD and ADHD. This project will characterize
children with ASD alone, ASD+ADHD, ADHD alone, and typically-developing children, using state-of-the-art
methods, including neurophysiology, eye-tracking, movement-tracking, and computer vision analysis. Project
3 will evaluate a novel early intervention model personalized for young children with ASD+ADHD that
pharmacologically addresses ADHD symptoms prior to initiating early behavioral intervention, and identify
changes in behavioral and neurophysiological activity that may underlie response to treatment. This project will
accomplish these goals by evaluating whether stimulant treatment (Adzenys-XR-ODT) augments the efficacy
of a parent-delivered behavioral intervention based on the Early Start Denver Model. This project will examine
whether changes in outcome are correlated with improvements in social attention, measured via eye-tracking
biomarkers, and social engagement during parent-child interaction. This project will also examine
neurophysiological changes underlying improvements in behavior. These projects will be supported by four
cores: Administrative Core, Recruitment and Assessment Core, Data Management and Analysis Core,
and Dissemination and Outreach Core. Functioning as a whole, the Duke Autism Center of Excellence will
offer the most comprehensive understanding to date of the impact of ADHD on young children with ASD,
providing important information that will allow for biologically informed and personalized methods for early
detection and treatment that could mitigate the negative impact of co-occurring ADHD on individuals with ASD.
Public Health Relevance Statement
PROJECT NARRATIVE - Co-occurring ADHD in young children with ASD: Precursors, detection, neural
signatures, and early treatment
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) affects 1 in 68 individuals in the U.S. and has an annual estimated cost of $126
billion. In ~40-60% of people with ASD, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) also occurs and is
associated with later ASD diagnosis, delayed access to intervention, and substantially poorer clinical outcomes.
To fill a critical gap in knowledge, the Duke Autism Center of Excellence will provide a comprehensive
understanding of the impact of ADHD on young children with ASD, including work that will enable improved early
detection and treatment that could mitigate the negative impact of ADHD symptoms and improve quality of life
for people with ASD.
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
CFDA Code
865
DUNS Number
044387793
UEI
TP7EK8DZV6N5
Project Start Date
07-September-2017
Project End Date
31-July-2022
Budget Start Date
07-September-2017
Budget End Date
31-July-2018
Project Funding Information for 2017
Total Funding
$2,380,519
Direct Costs
$1,500,000
Indirect Costs
$880,519
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
2017
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
$2,380,519
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
Sub Projects
No Sub Projects information available for 1P50HD093074-01
Publications
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Outcomes
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