IA Trial Radar | ||
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L'essai clinique NCT03838016 pour Classic Galactosemia, Troubles de la parole chez les enfants, Troubles du langage chez les enfants est actif, pas en recrutement. Consultez la vue en carte du Radar des Essais Cliniques et les outils de découverte par IA pour tous les détails, ou posez vos questions ici. | ||
Preventing Speech and Language Disorders in Children With Classic Galactosemia
The Babble Boot Camp is a program for children with CG, ages 2 to 24 months. The intervention is implemented by a pediatric speech-language pathologist (SLP) via parent training. Activities and routines are designed to foster earliest signals of communication, increase coo and babble behaviors, support the emergence of first words and word combinations, and expand syntactic complexity. The SLP meets with parents online every week for 10 to 15 minutes to provide instruction, feedback, and guidance. Close monitoring of progress is achieved via regularly administered questionnaires, a monthly day-long audio recording, and the SLPs weekly progress notes. At age 24 months, the active phase of the Babble Boot Camp ends. The children receive a professional speech/language assessment at ages 2 1/2, 3 1/2, and 4 1/2 years.
The investigators created an intervention program designed to support communication abilities during the prespeech and early speech and language stages for ages 2 to 24 months. The Babble Boot Camp (BBC) is implemented via parent training by a speech-language pathologist (SLP) with expertise in early childhood using Zoom, a HIPAA-compliant telepractice software provided for free by the PI's institution, to connect with the families. Zoom runs on computers, tablets, and smartphones. Parents learn about the typical milestones of prespeech, speech, and language development, potential red flags for delays, and importantly, activities that support typical development for all stages of the program. Following an orientation to the program, the SLP meets with each family once per week for training and consultation the relevant activities given the child's current speech/language status. Examples of activities are stimulating and reinforcing coos and babble, enriching the child's linguistic environment with joint book reading and pointing out the names of objects, and expanding child utterances to provide slightly more complex model sentences. The key principle underlying all activities is the zone of proximal development, also referred to as scaffolding, where parents provide speech and language models that bridge what the child can already to and what is slightly beyond the child's skill set: the model is in the zone of skills that the child can do with help. One key skill that is targeted throughout the program is imitation. The program brochure includes the rationale, instructions, and examples for each activity, such as (direct quote from the brochure): "Expanding on your child's utterance will provide a model for more complex sentence structures as well as increase her/his vocabulary. An added benefit is to let your child hear words in their correctly produced forms when her/his own productions are showing some incorrect speech sounds. This will build your child's awareness of what the word should sound like and get her/him ready to try the correct form. Throughout your daily routine, listen to your child's utterances and expand upon them slightly. You can add descriptive words or fill in some missing words to make a more complete sentence without overwhelming your child's ability to comprehend your sentence.
Examples: Child: "Goggie bye-bye." Parent: "Yeah, that doggie is going bye-bye!" - Child:
"Mommy doing?" Parent: "What is Mommy doing? She is taking Sammie outside."
Babble Boot Camp: Preventing Speech and Language Disorders in Children With Classic Galactosemia
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- STUDY00004969
| Groupe de participants/Bras | Intervention/Traitement |
|---|---|
ExpérimentalTreatment cohort with classic galactosemia These children and their parents receive the Babble Boot Camp intervention and also participate in the close monitoring activities (progress reports that the speech-language pathologist generates during the online meeting with the family; monthly daylong audio recording; questionnaires that are sent out every three to six months; formal speech and language testing at ages 2 1/2, 3 1/2, and 4 1/2 years). | Babble Boot Camp The Babble Boot Camp is an experimental study to investigate whether earliest and proactive activities and routines can positively influence the speech and language development of children who were diagnosed with classic galactosemia at birth. A speech-language pathologists implements the intervention by teaching parents to foster and expand earliest signals of communication, prespeech activities such as coo and babble, vocabulary growth, sentence complexity, and use of language to communicate. Examples are intentional eye contact, reinforcing babble with rewarding play activities, and repeating a child's rudimentary sentence with slight expansions to scaffold longer sentences. |
ExpérimentalTreatment cohort with classic galactosemia, delayed start The children in the control cohort enter the study when they are younger than 5 months old and participate in the close monitoring until they are 24 months old. They start getting the same treatment type and intensity as the treatment cohort but at a delayed age, when they turn 15 months. | Babble Boot Camp The Babble Boot Camp is an experimental study to investigate whether earliest and proactive activities and routines can positively influence the speech and language development of children who were diagnosed with classic galactosemia at birth. A speech-language pathologists implements the intervention by teaching parents to foster and expand earliest signals of communication, prespeech activities such as coo and babble, vocabulary growth, sentence complexity, and use of language to communicate. Examples are intentional eye contact, reinforcing babble with rewarding play activities, and repeating a child's rudimentary sentence with slight expansions to scaffold longer sentences. |
Aucune interventionOlder control cohort with classic galactosemia The children in the older control cohort are 6 months to 4 1/2 years old and provide standardized test results in the area of speech and language development at child ages 2 1/2, 3 1/2, and 4 1/2 years. They receive no treatment and no close monitoring. These families provide questionnaire information every three months until child age 24 months. | N/A |
Aucune interventionTypical controls These children are free of any medical or developmental diagnosis. They enter the study at ages 2 to 5 months and provide close monitoring data until they are 24 months old, then they receive standardized speech and language testing at ages 2 1/2, 3 1/2, and 4 1/2 years, just like the treatment cohort, but the typical controls receive no treatment under this study. | N/A |
| Critères d'évaluation | Description de critères | Période |
|---|---|---|
Speech sound production accuracy | Standardized testing of speech sounds using a published test of articulation | Through study completion, an average of 4 years 2 months |
Expressive language skills | Standardized testing of expressive language ability, using a published test of child language | Through study completion, an average of 4 years 2 months |
| Critères d'évaluation | Description de critères | Période |
|---|---|---|
Cognitive development | Standardized testing of cognitive development, using a published test | Through study completion, an average of 4 years 2 months |
Quality of life using the PedsQL questionnaires | Questionnaire-based assessment of quality of life for the child and parent(s). Captures physical functioning, physical symptoms, emotional functioning, social functioning, and cognitive functioning for children. Captures physical functioning, emotional functioning, social functioning, and work/school function for adults. | Through study completion, an average of 4 years 2 months |
Child health and development using the Ages and Stages Questionnaires 3 | Questionnaire-based assessment of child development in the areas of communication, gross motor, fine motor, problem solving, and personal-social development for children. | Through study completion, an average of 4 years 2 months |
- Newborn diagnosis of classic galactosemia
- Any ethnic or racial background
- Primary language in the home is English
- Any geographic region in the US and other countries because the intervention is done online
- Computer and internet access (we can help if a family wants to participate but doesn't have this access)
- At least one parent must have at least an 8th grade education to be able to fill out the questionnaires
- Other forms of galactosemia outside of classic galactosemia
- Medical, sensory, or psychiatric condition that could introduce confounding, e.g., Trisomy 21 or deafness
Arizona