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Caregiver- and Clinician-Reported Adaptive Functioning in Rett Syndrome: a Systematic Review and Evaluation of Measurement Strategies

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Abstract

Rett syndrome is the second most common cause of intellectual disability in females worldwide. The severity of many individuals’ impairment limits the effectiveness of traditional assessment. However, clinician and parent reports of adaptive functioning may provide insight into these patients’ abilities. This review aims to synthesize the current literature assessing adaptive functioning in Rett syndrome and evaluate existing measurement tools in this population. A search was conducted on PubMed using the search term “Rett syndrome.” Studies that quantitatively assessed adaptive functioning outcomes in Rett syndrome with published and normed questionnaire measures were included. Twenty-three studies met inclusion criteria. Overall results indicate that the population of people with Rett syndrome is highly impaired, both in overall adaptive functioning as well as in specific subdomains (e.g., mobility, activities of daily living). Atypical Rett syndrome groups performed better on measures of adaptive functioning relative to patients with classic Rett syndrome. Our findings identified measurement weaknesses, as many of the studies found floor effects and therefore were unable to capture meaningful variability in outcomes. Individuals with Rett syndrome are highly reliant on caregivers due to disrupted adaptive functioning abilities. Optimizing measurement of adaptive skills in Rett syndrome will facilitate the quantification of meaningful change in skills and the identification of efficacious interventions aimed at improving outcomes and quality of life.

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Acknowledgments

We thank the students in Dr. King’s Developmental Neuropsychology Across the Lifespan (DNP-ATL) Laboratory who assisted with acquiring and organizing articles for the systematic research review. Research reported in this publication was supported by Georgia State University initiatives which provided DNP-ATL graduate student fellowships: Brains & Behavior (S.D.N., M.E.F., E.S.S.), and 2CI Neurogenomics (R.K.).

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Correspondence to Tricia Z. King.

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Semmel, E.S., Fox, M.E., Na, S.D. et al. Caregiver- and Clinician-Reported Adaptive Functioning in Rett Syndrome: a Systematic Review and Evaluation of Measurement Strategies. Neuropsychol Rev 29, 465–483 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11065-019-09420-9

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11065-019-09420-9

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