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Neurodevelopmental disorders including intellectual disability: a clinical tool kit for mental health professionals

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 October 2022

Asit B. Biswas*
Affiliation:
Consultant psychiatrist with Leicestershire Partnership NHS Trust, working in the Agnes Unit, Leicester, and an Honorary Professor in the Department of Health Sciences, University of Leicester, UK.
Patricia Casey
Affiliation:
Editor of BJPsych Advances. She is a consultant psychiatrist in the Mater Misericordiae University Hospital, Dublin, Ireland. She is Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry, University College, Dublin, Ireland, and Adjunct Professor in the School of Medicine at the University of Notre Dame, Sydney, Australia.
*
Correspondence Asit B. Biswas. Email: ab916@leicester.ac.uk
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Summary

This editorial introduces the first of two special issues of BJPsych Advances on neurodevelopmental disorders, including intellectual disability, autism spectrum disorder, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and epilepsy. This issue is intended to offer a clinical tool kit for mental health professionals giving guidance on assessment and management of these disorders and associated conditions, such as behaviours that challenge.

Type
Editorial
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Royal College of Psychiatrists

Neurodevelopmental disorders are primarily clinical conditions with onset typically during the developmental period. Clinical features usually become evident during the pre-school years. Developmental delays in learning, communication and acquiring new skills, together with global deficits in areas such as intellectual ability, social and occupational functioning and the control of executive functions and behaviour, are common across the spectrum of neurodevelopmental disorders.

Neurodevelopmental disorders are classified in DSM-5 (American Psychiatric Association 2013) into intellectual disability, autism spectrum disorder (ASD), attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), communication disorders, specific learning disorder, motor disorders and other neurodevelopmental disorders. The classification has helped in our understanding of each neurodevelopmental disorder. It helps delineate neurodevelopmental disorders one from another, notwithstanding their co-occurrence and sometimes overlapping symptoms, and also from other psychiatric disorders that can cause diagnostic overshadowing. However, owing to overlapping behavioural phenotypes there is an increasing trend to view and classify neurodevelopmental disorders on a spectrum. Given the considerable genetic heterogeneity, there is also a move to classify these disorders on the basis of genetic aetiology and epigenetic mechanisms and to link behavioural phenotype to genotype (Morris-Rosendahl Reference Morris-Rosendahl and Crocq2020).

Advances in assessment and treatment

Over the past decade, advancements in assessment tools and the development of a range of evidence-based therapeutic techniques that have a clearer rationale have promoted evidence-based treatment of neurodevelopmental disorders in community and hospital settings. These tools and techniques have also been incorporated into clinical tool kits and clinical care pathways, for example clinical guidelines and quality standards, by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE). Evidence-based interventions have included:

  • psychological approaches incorporating applied behaviour analysis, positive behaviour support, dialectical behaviour therapy, steps to effective problem-solving, mindfulness-informed approaches, environmental adjustment and manipulation, group cognitive–behavioural therapy and eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing;

  • speech and language therapy and enhanced communication, for example the use of Makaton, British sign language or the picture exchange communication system (PECS) and the use of assistive technology;

  • occupational therapy, such as sensory integration training;

  • genetic screening panels for determining the aetiology of intellectual disability, autism and epilepsy;

  • the use of psychotropic medication for mental illness, ADHD and for behaviours that challenge; such prescribing is mindful of the risk of overmedication in people with ID, autism or both, and is actively incorporated within clinical care pathways, taking a multidisciplinary and holistic approach, as in two NHS England projects: ‘Stopping the over-medication of people with a learning disability [intellectual disability], autism or both’ (STOMP), which aims to prevent weight gain, patients feeling ‘drugged up’ and complications such as serious physical health problems (NHS England 2022), and ‘Supporting treatment and appropriate medication in paediatrics’ (STAMP), which promotes the availability and use of appropriate medication in line with NICE guidance for children and young people (Royal College of Psychiatrists 2021);

  • risk formulation and the reduction of restrictive practices and interventions;

  • timely assessment, diagnosis and appropriate treatment for physical health conditions, thereby reducing both morbidity and mortality.

A shift of perspective

Our understanding of neurodevelopmental conditions has also been enhanced by a sociological perspective that normalises such conditions and moves away from the language of disorder and deficits. There is a move embracing neurodiversity (Singer Reference Singer2016), promoting the idea that the communication and interactions, behaviour and experiences of people with autism, ADHD, intellectual disability and other neurodevelopmental conditions vary from individual to individual, questioning and debating commonly held concepts of the ‘normal’ range of processing of thought, learning and adaptive behaviour.

Several legal frameworks are in place enforcing equality and reasonable adjustments in the workplace and wider society; these help to reduce stigma, promote social inclusion and encourage ‘co-production’ with people with neurodevelopmental conditions in the development of public services and provision of opportunities to enable them to lead their best life in the community.

Ethical principles and evidence-based guidance (or lack of it) for managing mental illness and behaviours that challenge in people with neurodevelopmental disorders have led to considerable investment by policy makers, care providers and mental health and social care services in respect of the changes in psychiatry's approach to managing these conditions and improving the quality of life of those affected.

This issue

In this first of two themed issues on neurodevelopmental disorders, we focus on clinical practice guidance and clinical tool kits for assessment and management of these disorders and associated conditions, such as behaviours that challenge. In their article on developmental disorders in children, Tevis & Matson (Reference Tevis and Matson2022) discuss prevalence, assessment tools, risk factors and evidence-based treatment options. Hassiotis & Rudra (Reference Hassiotis and Rudra2022) describe a stepped-care model for behaviours that challenge in adults with intellectual disability, within the context of the relative lack of single interventions showing clinical and cost-effectiveness. Perera and colleagues (Reference Perera, McCarthy and Courtenay2022) describe the presentation of ADHD symptoms and functional impairments in people with intellectual disabilities, to promote accurate diagnosis by clinicians; they also explore the relationship between autism and bipolar disorder.

The article by Davidson and colleagues (Reference Davidson, Moran and Minnis2022) reflecting on the use of available clinical tools to help differentiate between autism and attachment disorder is complemented by a commentary by Biswas & Beardsworth (Reference Biswas and Beardsworth2022).

A user-friendly tool kit on genetic testing for psychiatrists is described by Clark & Koutsogianni (Reference Clark and Koutsogianni2022), incorporating an overview of the range of genetic tests and panels available for intellectual disabilities, ASD and epilepsy. The authors also provide guidance on when to refer to a clinical geneticist and where to find resources and information for parents and carers about genetic testing.

The article by Williams and colleagues (Reference Williams, Gibbs and Addo2022) describes psychiatric, neurobiological and physical conditions associated with pica, discussing their assessment and management.

The issue opens with a Cochrane Corner summary of the findings Maguire and colleagues’ (Reference Maguire, Marson and Nevitt2022) review evaluating the efficacy and safety of antidepressants for treating depressive symptoms in people with epilepsy and depression and the effect on seizures, which is followed by with a commentary by Makan (Reference Makan2022).

It was our goal to provide psychiatrists who work with those with neurodevelopmental disorders an up-to-date overview of the latest developments in the assessment, diagnosis and management of this range of conditions. We trust that we achieve this.

Author contributions

Both A.B. and P.C. conceived, drafted and revised the final manuscript.

Funding

This article received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

Declaration of interest

A.B. is a member of the BJPsych Advances editorial board and P.C. is the editor of BJPsych Advances.

References

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