Duke Autism Center of Excellence: A translational digital health and computational approach to early identification, outcome monitoring, and biomarker discovery in autism

NIH RePORTER · NIH · P50 · $2,415,000 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

ABSTRACT – Overall The overall goal of the Duke Autism Center of Excellence is to use an innovative, translational digital health and computational approach to address the critical need for more effective autism screening tools, objective outcome measures, and brain-based biomarkers that can be used in clinical trials with young autistic children. An Administrative Core, Dissemination and Outreach Core, and Data Management and Analysis Core will support three Projects. Project 1 will recruit a large population of 16- to 30-month-old toddlers through primary care clinics to evaluate the accuracy of a remotely administered novel digital phenotyping application (app) for detecting early signs of autism. The app automatically quantifies observations of children’s behavior using computer vision analysis and is deployed on widely available devices. The usability of the app for longitudinal outcome monitoring will be assessed at 16-30, 36, and 48 months of age. The feasibility of using computer vision analysis to measure patterns of caregiver-child interactions from videos recorded at home will be explored. Project 2 will develop a complementary autism screening approach by using North Carolina Medicaid and Blue Cross Blue Shield claims data (N ~ 230,000, autism cases ~6,000) to create a generalizable autism prediction model based on routine health data collected from birth to 18 months. Then, using Duke University Health System electronic health records (EHR; N ~ 64,000, autism cases ~ 800), this Project will use natural language processing to assess the added predictive value of EHR elements not captured in claims data (e.g., clinician notes). Both data sets will be leveraged to gain insight into the nature and prevalence of medical conditions in infants and toddlers who are later diagnosed with autism. Projects 1 and 2 will collaboratively engage primary care providers and other stakeholders to design an automated clinical decision support tool for autism screening that, in the future, could be integrated into the primary care provider’s clinical workflow. Project 3 will use an innovative machine learning computational method to develop a multimodal biomarker that combines features of electroencephalographic (EEG) activity and synchronized measures of children’s behavior (e.g., social attention) automatically coded via computer vision analysis, with a focus on neural connectivity measured via traditional methods (coherence, phase-lag index) and novel neural network analysis methods (discriminative cross-spectral factor analysis) developed by our team. This multimodal approach will be evaluated in 3–6-year-old autistic children without intellectual disability (ID), age- and sex-matched neurotypical children, and autistic children with ID (IQ <= 70). Across Projects, our Center’s team will share cutting-edge computational methods to develop new tools that can address long-standing barriers to optimal care and enhanced quality of life for autistic child...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10523403
Project number
2P50HD093074-06
Recipient
DUKE UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
Geraldine Dawson
Activity code
P50
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$2,415,000
Award type
2
Project period
2017-09-07 → 2027-08-31