Harman Patil (Editor)

Childhood autism spectrum test

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LOINC
  
62740-6

Synonyms
  
Childhood Asperger Syndrome Test Social and Communication Development Questionnaire

The Childhood Autism Spectrum Test, abbreviated as CAST and formerly titled the Childhood Asperger Syndrome Test, is a tool to screen for Asperger Syndrome and related social and communication conditions falling on the Autism Spectrum in children aged 4–11 years, in a non-clinical setting. It is also called the Social and Communication Development Questionnaire.

Contents

Development

The questionnaire was developed by the Autism Research Centre at the University of Cambridge, by Fiona J Scott, Simon Baron-Cohen, Patrick Bolton, and Carol Brayne.

Pilot Study

The pilot study was used to discern the preliminary cutoff scores for the CAST. Parents of 13 children with Asperger Syndrome and 37 typically developing children completed the CAST questionnaire. There were significant differences in average scores, with the Asperger Syndrome sample average of 21.08 (range 15 - 31) and the typical sample average of 4.73 (range 0–13).

Main Study

Parents of 1150 primary school aged children were sent the CAST questionnaire, with 199 responders and 174 taking part in the full data analysis. The results suggested that, compared to other screening tools currently available, the CAST may be useful for identifying children at risk for Asperger Syndrome and related Autism Spectrum conditions, in a mainstream non-clinical sample.

Additional Research

Research is ongoing to establish accurate sensitivity data, validity, reliability, to replicate current findings in a larger and geographically more diverse sample, and to study the epidemiological issues in greater detail. The PhenX Toolkit uses CAST as its child protocol for symptoms of autism spectrum disorders.

Format

The CAST questionnaire contains 37 yes-or-no questions about the child's social behaviors and communication tendencies. It also contains a separate special needs section that asks about other comorbid disorders that the child might have.

References

Childhood-autism spectrum test Wikipedia