Food Difficulties in Infancy and ASD: A Literature Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Inclusion Criteria
2.3. Data Extraction and Analysis
2.4. Quality Assessment
3. Results
3.1. Selection of Studies
3.2. Breastfeeding Difficulties
3.3. Food Selectivity
3.4. Mealtime Behaviors
3.5. Food Refusal
3.6. Risk of Bias
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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First Author (Year) | Region, Country | Study Period | Study Design | Sample Size | Age Range | Selection of Sample | Main Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
[5] | Florida, USA | July 2017–March 2018 | cross-sectional | 41 (typically developing control from the study) | 2–17 years old | Through the Center for Autism and Related Disabilities (CARD), other local centers for autism, clinics, and schools, parents were invited to participate in the study Parents completed a 48-question survey via Qualtrics online software. |
|
[10] | USA | NR | case report | 1 (no controls) | 28 months | From a short-term outpatient nutritional and behavioral feeding intervention program. | Mother stated the child’s refuse to come nearby new foods. Expressed tantrums, cry, screaming when other people ate. When food entered her mouth, she noted gagging up to emesis. Denied all liquids than breast milk, only little water rarely. Drinking from straw but choking. |
[7] | Rome, Italy | NR | cross-sectional | 60 ASD children with a control group of 50 typically developing Italian children | 20–44 months | From the Child Neuropsychiatry Unit of the Policlinico Umberto I, in Rome, Italy | Significant differences found between both ASD groups vs controls (p < 0.001) concerning food refusal. |
[22] | Denmark | 1996–2012 | cohort | 1313 (973 children with ASD and a control group of 300 children with intellectual disability) | At time of ASD diagnosis 8 years, at the end of follow up 11 years | By telephone interviews at the 12th week of pregnancy, 6 & 18 months. Identification of children through linkage of the cohort via the unique personal identification number with the Danish Psychiatric central Research Register |
|
[4] | Italy | 2009–2016 | cross-sectional | 163 (no controls) | 20–71 months | From a tertiary care university hospital. |
|
[11] | USA | NR | cross-sectional | 19 chlidren and 16 mothers (no controls) | 5 to 6 years at the time of the interview, 18 months to 8 years—at the time of diagnosis | Through posters, flyers, an information table at ASD community events, and two community clinics that serve families with ASD. | According to the results of this study, 12 out of 19 children have initiated breastfeeding without difficulty and 14 have established breastfeeding with success. Among them, only 6 have breastfed beyond 6 months. Moreover more than half of the mothers (9/16) have described that their infants presented a dysregulated feeding pattern of vigorous sucking without stopping of their own volition. Authors have concluded that this pattern could be evaluated by clinicians in the general pediatric population and/or at-risk infant siblings of children with ASD. |
[23] | India | May 2015–June 2016 | case-control | 30 children with ASD vs 30 typically developed children | 2–6 years old | From a child guidance clinic of a tertiary care teaching hospital in India | Comparison of feeding practices of children with ASD vs Typically developing siblings:
|
[17] | Avon area, England | April 1991–December 1992 | cohort | 79 children with ASD vs 12901 controls | 28 months | Data concerning feeding and food frequency were collected by questionnaires completed at 6, 15, 24, 38 and 54 months by caregivers in the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children |
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[12] | USA | NR | cross-sectional | 349 Autism (n = 26) Down syndrome (n = 21) Cerebral palsy (n = 44) | 1 month-12 years old | Participants were collected from an interdisciplinary feeding program for the evaluation of feeding problems | A total of 26 children have been diagnosed with autism in the studied group. Among them 12% pesented food refusal, 62% selectivity by type, 31% selectivity by texture, 15% oral motor delay and 12% dysphagia. All the children with autism who presented food refusal had gastro-oesophageal reflux. The prevalence of food selectivity by type was found to be significantly higher for children with autism (χ2 = 27.49; p < 0.001). |
[6] | USA | NR | cross-sectional | 19 | 15–36 months | Those children were participants in a larger longitudinal infant sibling study that observes early development to better characterize early manifestations of ASD | ASD group exhibited greater increase and more rapidly in feeding difficulties over time compared with Non -Typical Development, High Risk-Typical Development, Low Risk-Typical Development with significantly more feeding difficulties by the age of 36months. |
[3] | London, United Kingdom | NR | case series | 7 (no controls) | Ages at diagnosis: case1 = 3.10 years old. case 4 = 3.8 years old. case 5 = 3.11 years old. case 7 = 5.4 years old (case 2.3.6 were rejected due to medical problems) | These seven children come from the author’s clinic population of approximately 350 children with autism, diagnosed following assessment in the child development services of two UK health districts | All 7 cases presented problems weaning to solids and some kind of abnormal food behavior. 2 cases (3 + 4) presented breastfeeding or bottle feeding problems. The presence of such persistent feeding problems should alert clinicians to the possibility of autsim. |
[15] | Hudson Valley, New York, USA | 1999–2005 | chart review | ASD children (n = 78)/vs children with language difficulties (n = 85): | 9–36 months | From University Center for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities which had sufficient information and documents coming from families who asked help there for either diagnostic evaluation or service coordination. were not children with primarily health, motor, or global developmental delays, appeared to be best candidates for the 2 groups (ASD and LD) | Food Selectivity by Texture: ASD 23.1% /LD 7.1% (chi square 8.31, p = 0.004), Food Selectivity by Type: ASD 24.4% /LD 11.8% (chi square 4.41, p =0.036), New Food Refusal: ASD 10.3% /LD 0.0% (chi square 9.17, p = 0.002), Food Overstuffing: ASD 14.1% /LD 3.5% (chi square 5.79, p = 0.001), Mean of four feeding problems for ASD group:0.72 (0.98) (0–4)/LD 0.22 (0.47) (0–2) t = 4.16 df = 161 p = 0.000). Significant main effect for gender was found with male children showing more feeding problems than female children (male: M = 0.59, SD = 0.89 and female M = 0.16 SD = 0.43). No significant main effect was found for age of first evaluation or neighborhood income and no significant Diagnostic Group X gender interaction effects appeared. |
[13] | USA | NR | cross sectional | 1112 (no controls) | 1–17 | Children that underwent a comprehensive diagnostic evaluation by a licensed PhD psychologist. (semi-structured diagnostic interview with the parents using the Checklist for Autism Spectrum Disorder, CASD) | The prevalence of picky eaters in the sample with autism was higher than in the sample in toddlers in general population. |
[24] | France | NR | cohort | 13 ASD and 14 typical devellopment | 3–6 months | From family movies collected from psychologists in France who spoke French and an institution for people with autism in Flanders who spoke Dutch. | Infants with ASD had a deficit in mouth-opening anticipation while being fed in relation to typically development (TD) children. Although there is no difference in the number of attempts and the age, there was significant difference regarding the anticipation disorder (t(29) = −2.86; p = 0.008). The anticipation success depends on group (chi square (1) = 3.95; p = 0.047), meaning that fewer infants succeed in anticipating in the ASD group VS TD group. |
[18] | South Derbyshire Health Authority | NR | cross sectional | 17 (no controls) | 42–117 months | identified by the Consultant Community Paediatrician | All parents of 17 cases (100%) reported a food refusal and also difficulty in introduction of new foods into their diet. They also stated that as babies they were eating everything and suddenly hardly did they eat anything. This occurred between 12 months and 3 years combined with loss of skills and other developmental delays. |
[20] | Canada | 1 January 2006–30 September 2006 | cross sectional | 48 children with ASD and their sibblings (n = 48) | 3–12 years | Registered in one of four local rehabilitation centers, one tertiary pediatric hospital or one of two parent associations in Quebec, Canada. | It is important to screen children for eating difficulties with ASD as they had more eating problems and more mealtime behaviors than their typically developing siblings (F(1.45) = 23.24, p = 0.001). ASD children had a significant history of eating difficulties as infants in relation to their siblings t = 3.87, p < 0.001. No difference in duration of bottle feeding, breast feeding and use of pacifier between the two groups. |
[14] | USA | NR | cross sectional | 24 children with ASD vs 24 with typical development (TD) | 3–6 years | Selected from a University Center for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities (UCEDD) which offers services. | 47% of mothers who nursed their ASD child had breastfeeding difficulties while only 20% of mothers who nursed their TD child reported such difficulties (p = 0.34). As their child was growing up, concerns were increasing. |
[16] | Italy | February 2001–July 2011 | cross sectional | 105 from which 57 cases idiopathic (54.3%) and 48 non-idiopathic (45.7%) with no significant differences between them. | 0–51 months | Hospitalized at the Autism Centre of the Neurological Clinic of the University of Bologna. | Early ASD signs in the whole sample: 43.8% had feeding disorders. From them, selective eaters: 25.7%, scarce feeding: 11.4% and other feeding disorders: 23.8%. Feeding problems were more frequent (p = 0.031) in cases with delay (50%) and stagnation (53.3%) than in cases with regression (22.2%). |
[2] | Sweden | NR | cross sectional | 190 children with ASD and 161 children (comparison group) | 0–2 years | from Child Health Centre (CHC) | Regulator problem (RP) in infancy was very common in children later diagnosed with ASD. The number of consultations for feeding was significant higher in the ASD group compared to the non ASD group U = 12745 (z = −3.38, p = 0.001). From 190 ASD children, the 105 parents of them filled out DISCO interview and there was correlation between sleeping problems (rs = 0.37, p < 0.001) and feeding problems (rs = 0.21, p = 0.033) |
[19] | Bristol, England | April 1991-December 1992 | cohort | 86 (no controls) | 0–30 months | Children in the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) with ASD identified either from community pediatric records or from the special educational needs databases for the region. | Children who exhibited later ASD or autistic traits, already exhibited developmental differences at 6 months including vision, hearing, feeding and bowel habit. There was a significant difference after Bonferrori adjustment (p < 0.00021) at 15 months old in feeding difficulties and fads. |
[21] | Canada | NR | case series | 9 (no controls) | 6–36 months | The first nine children from a prospective study of infant siblings, recruited from three multidisciplinary autism diagnostic and treatment centers in Canada, including McMaster Children’s Hospital in Hamilton, the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, the IWK Health Centre in Halifax and from clinicians in the surrounding regions. | case 1/male: at 12 months refused food not smooth in consistency. Case 2/female: at 12 months limited food preferences. Case 3/female: at 12 months eats variety of foods but being fussy and with difficulties to soothe. Settlement with mom’s tickles or her slow singing or with a bottle. Case 4/male: not reported feeding. Case 5/male: at 10 months resists being fed. Case 6/female: not reported feeding. Case 7/male: not reported feeding. Case 8/male: no feeding problems at 12 months but 24 months limited food preferences (cheese, fruit, starches). Case 9/female: at 18 months strong food preferences—spits out meat and eats fish only if pureed). |
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Vasilakis, M.; Polychronis, K.; Panagouli, E.; Tzila, E.; Papageorgiou, A.; Thomaidou, L.; Psaltopoulou, T.; Tsolia, M.; Sergentanis, T.N.; Tsitsika, A.K. Food Difficulties in Infancy and ASD: A Literature Review. Children 2023, 10, 84. https://doi.org/10.3390/children10010084
Vasilakis M, Polychronis K, Panagouli E, Tzila E, Papageorgiou A, Thomaidou L, Psaltopoulou T, Tsolia M, Sergentanis TN, Tsitsika AK. Food Difficulties in Infancy and ASD: A Literature Review. Children. 2023; 10(1):84. https://doi.org/10.3390/children10010084
Chicago/Turabian StyleVasilakis, Marios, Konstantinos Polychronis, Eleni Panagouli, Efthalia Tzila, Alexia Papageorgiou, Loretta Thomaidou, Theodora Psaltopoulou, Maria Tsolia, Theodoros N. Sergentanis, and Artemis K. Tsitsika. 2023. "Food Difficulties in Infancy and ASD: A Literature Review" Children 10, no. 1: 84. https://doi.org/10.3390/children10010084
APA StyleVasilakis, M., Polychronis, K., Panagouli, E., Tzila, E., Papageorgiou, A., Thomaidou, L., Psaltopoulou, T., Tsolia, M., Sergentanis, T. N., & Tsitsika, A. K. (2023). Food Difficulties in Infancy and ASD: A Literature Review. Children, 10(1), 84. https://doi.org/10.3390/children10010084