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Relationships, Employment, Autonomy, and Life Satisfaction (REALS) Study

Completed
Conditions
Autism Spectrum Disorder
Interventions
Diagnostic Test: REALS Testing
Diagnostic Test: REALS Development
Registration Number
NCT04381195
Lead Sponsor
University of Pittsburgh
Brief Summary

One of the major methodological obstacles to more informed policies and programs to support the successful transition to adulthood in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is the absence of suitable measures of meaningful outcomes for adults. Currently available options include (a) measures designed for children that largely fail to capture concepts pertinent in adulthood or (b) the use of broad, often dichotomous outcomes (e.g., employed or not) that are insufficiently sensitive for monitoring progress. The objective of this project is to develop efficient and validated proxy and self-report measures for autistic adults and adults with other IDD in the domains of relationships, employment, autonomy, and life satisfaction called the REALS.

This study will build on prior success in applying methods from the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS®) to measurement development in ASD and will utilize a national sample of 500 autistic adults capable of self-report and 500 caregivers of autistic adults representative of the entire range of speaking level.

Detailed Description

A major methodological obstacle to more informed policies to support autistic adults and adults with other intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) is the absence of suitable measures of outcomes for autistic adults. Landmark studies of adult outcome have traditionally classified individuals as having good, fair, or poor outcomes, a rating which has low reliability and is generally insensitive to treatment-related changes. Other studies have utilized adaptive behavior scales as functional outcome measures even though they were not designed for that purpose, such as the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales (VABS). Importantly, meaningful aspects of adult life are related to, but different than, adaptive function, with the former being the key endpoints of intervention (e.g., employment, friendships) and adaptive function representing important abilities (e.g., communication, ability to follow instructions) that contribute to improved outcomes. Further, the VABS and similar measures were originally developed for children to confirm disability status in school, and as such they have limited coverage of adult content. Therefore, there is an urgent need for sensitive and validated measures of adult outcomes.

The completion of these aims will generate, for the first time, a reliable and valid measure of adulthood functioning in ASD that is efficient and broadly applicable across the full range of speaking ability. The availability of such a measure is essential to inform and evaluate program development, understand individual-level factors associated with outcomes, and ultimately to develop actionable items to improve the transition to adulthood and adult life.

The objective of this project is to develop efficient and validated proxy and self-report measures or autistic adults and adults with other IDD -relationships, employment, autonomy, and life satisfaction called the REALS, and establish the validity of the REALS utilizing state-level service utilization data. This study will build on a previous study's success in applying methods from PROMIS® to measurement development in ASD.

Aim 1. Develop and refine an item pool. The REALS study will:

1. Complete drafting of an item pool with expert input (autistic adults, parents, adult service providers, researchers);

2. Assign items to all parts of the conceptual framework to ensure sufficient construct coverage across employment, social, and independent living domains; and

3. Conduct cognitive interviews with 25 caregivers of autistic adults and adults with other IDD and 25 self-reporting adults.

Aim 2. Establish the psychometrics of the REALS and derive caregiver and self-report short-forms that are reliable and valid. A national sample of proxy reporters (e.g., parents, clinicians, group home staff) for 500 adults with ASD representative of the full range of verbal and intellectual abilities and 500 self-reporting autistic adults will complete the REALS draft items and a co-calibration battery to establish psychometrics, generate short-forms, and ensure applicability across autistic adults.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
1650
Inclusion Criteria

Across Aims, inclusion criteria are:

  1. adult age, defined as 18+ years old;
  2. professional diagnosis of ASD or caregiver of an adult with a professional diagnosis of ASD.

Inclusion criteria for caregivers of adults with ASD will be

  1. age 18 years or older;
  2. caregiver of an autistic adult with at least weekly contact. For adults who cannot self-report, only caregiver report data on the REALS will be collected.
Exclusion Criteria

Because the goal is to refine the items and ensure coverage of all relevant constructs, the investigators will seek a broad sample to support generalizability and representativeness (there will be no exclusion criteria).

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Aim 2REALS TestingItem Calibration (Aim 2). Measures will be completed online and therefore the sample will include those with self-reported IDD or autism diagnoses and their caregivers (total n of 1000 each)
Aim 1REALS DevelopmentItem Drafting and Revising (Aim 1). Together with a stakeholder panel of autistic adults and adults with IDD and parents/caregivers, the study investigators will generate an item pool based on the conceptual model.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Relationships, Employment, Autonomy and Life Satisfaction (REALS) Scale5 years

The completion of these aims will generate, for the first time, a reliable and valid measure of adulthood functioning in ASD that is efficient and broadly applicable across the full range of functioning.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Pittsburgh

🇺🇸

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States

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