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Clinical Trials/NCT03518710
NCT03518710
Unknown
Not Applicable

Vision, Attention and Reading in Neurofibromatosis Type 1 (NF1) Children

University Hospital, Toulouse1 site in 1 country15 target enrollmentAugust 2018

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Neurofibromatosis Type 1
Sponsor
University Hospital, Toulouse
Enrollment
15
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Evaluation of the composite score obtained for Visuo-perceptual process
Last Updated
7 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The present project will therefore focus upon those processes related to visual attention and perceptual abilities and on their potential to explain reading behavior and reading problems in NF1. The main objective of this study is to clarify the specificity and heterogeneity of reading profiles and the causes of its disturbance in NF1. In particular, this project allow the investigators to study more precisely the relations between perceptual, oculomotor and visuo-attentional skills in NF1 children and reading abilities. In addition, a new oculomotor/perceptual reading aid for NF1 children will be evaluated. The investigators believe that the early intervention for perceptual, visuo-attentional or oculomotor problems may promote academic skill development.

Detailed Description

Although some NF1 children manage in the end to exhibit "expert" reading behavior, a non-negligible number of them have real problems learning this skill. Today's estimates indicate that 30-60% of NF1 children suffer from written-language learning disorder. Studies of the effects of the neurocognitive deficit on academic performance are relatively rare, owing to the small size of the populations concerned. However, research is needed to develop effective rehabilitation programs. At the current time, most tools available to professionals are designed for the evaluation and remediation of child language problems, particularly difficulties related to the acquisition of meta-phonological skills. The findings from dyslexics and typically developing readers however suggest a strong relationship between reading ability and visual processing. The main goal of this study is to investigate the occurrence of perceptual, visuo-attentional and oculomotor deficits in NF1 children and their potential to explain reading behavior and reading problems in this population. The investigators hope to contribute to the process of clarifying the specificity and heterogeneity of reading profiles and the causes of its disturbance in NF1. The second objective of the study is to evaluate an oculomotor/perceptual reading aid for NF1 children; in particular, the idea of the training is to help the readers to land their saccades at the optimal viewing position1 (OVP) of each word (highlighting the letter at the OVP or putting it in color, so that the saccades they make would land near the centre of the word, at the OVP). Eye movement control during reading is a highly automated process; people are not aware of most of the saccades and fixations they make. This tool is a way to train children to control these subconscious saccades and fixations. Note that, our team has already demonstrated the usefulness of this reading aid for beginning readers. This project have important implications from a clinical perspective, by providing the opportunity to gain insight into the reading difficulties of NF1 children, in view of establishing thorough and accurate assessment procedures and proposing child-specific guidelines and remediation methods that take into account the particular processes affected. Providing a clearer picture of visuo-attentional and perceptual skills in children with NF1 would be of considerable clinical benefit, not least for supporting targeted clinical practices. Moreover, NF1 children could benefit from a new remediation tool that allow them to have feedback on their reading ability, and to read more easily, more rapidly, and with better comprehension. If appropriate interventions are implemented at an early age, academic skill development could be altered, preventing subtle learning difficulties from becoming more pronounced over time.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
August 2018
End Date
May 2019
Last Updated
7 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Single Group
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Child with a NF1 following the clinically-based criteria agreed at the international Consensus Conference
  • Age between 7 and 9 years old child in 1st - 3rd grades with 5 children/grade
  • Informed children and written consent obtained from one of the parents or other lawful representative
  • Child who is covered by the social security scheme

Exclusion Criteria

  • left-handed children
  • associated neurological disorder such as brain tumors or epilepsy
  • mental retardation (IQ \<70 or Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC) scores SIM et IC \< 7)
  • children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
  • diagnosis of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) (DSM-IV), with presence of hyperactive-impulsive or inattentive symptom
  • pharmaceutical treatment (e.g., anti-depressants, anxiolytics)

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Evaluation of the composite score obtained for Visuo-perceptual process

Time Frame: 1 day

The visual process : Visuo-perceptual process : it's a composite score : Composite score of perceptual treatment with pure visual perception score and visuo-motor integration with a Developmental Test of Visual Perception, 3rd (DTVP3) test is Visual perception development test

Evaluation of the score obtained for Oculomotor Processes

Time Frame: 1 day

The visual process : Oculomotor Processes : Vertical,Horizontal Time with the Ratio with the Developmental Eye Movement Test (DEM test) : a standard of evaluation oculomotor in children with reading difficulties

Evaluation of the score obtained : Visual-attentional process

Time Frame: 1 day

Visual-attentional process : reaction time (milli Sec) with the percentage of correct answers to the computerized Stroop to show that attention is a selective process and that it is very difficult to read and name colors at the same time

Secondary Outcomes

  • Alouette Reading Test(1 day)

Study Sites (1)

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