4.5 Article

Developmental cascades between insistence on sameness behaviour and anxiety symptoms in autism spectrum disorder

Journal

EUROPEAN CHILD & ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY
Volume 32, Issue 11, Pages 2109-2118

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00787-022-02049-9

Keywords

Autism spectrum disorder; Anxiety; Longitudinal cohort; Structural equation modelling

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Autistic children experience high rates of anxiety, with insistence on sameness behavior being a core feature that correlates with anxiety severity. This study examined the longitudinal relations between anxiety and insistence on sameness (IS) in autistic children and found that IS may precede the development of anxiety symptoms in the future. The associations between anxiety and IS may decrease with age.
Autistic children experience high rates of anxiety. Insistence on sameness behaviour (IS) is a core feature of autism that appears correlated with anxiety severity. The objective of this study was to examine the longitudinal relations between anxiety and IS in autistic children using a developmental cascade model. A longitudinal cohort of 421 autistic children was followed between 4 and 11 years of age. Anxiety was quantified using items from the Anxiety Problems subscale of the Child Behavior Checklist; sameness behaviours were measured using the Repetitive Behavior Scale-Revised, Ritualistic/sameness subscale (both parent-report measures). Structural equation modelling was used to examine the longitudinal and directional associations between anxiety and IS at four time-points, through cross-lagged panel models (CLPM) with and without a random-intercepts component (RI-CLPM). Both the CLPM and the RI-CLPM had good fit. Significant directional associations were detected whereby elevated or increasing IS preceded elevated or increasing anxiety symptoms 1-2 years later, respectively. Stable baseline tendencies towards anxiety and IS as between-person traits (intercepts) were strongly associated (standardized estimate = 0.69, p < 0.001). The magnitude of the cross-sectional associations between anxiety and IS appeared to lessen with age. IS and anxiety symptoms in autism are closely related. They appear to be shared traits that mirror each other particularly in younger children. Increasing IS may be a sign of emerging future anxiety. Interventions that target IS to reduce or prevent anxiety amongst school-aged autistic children merit further study.

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