Construction and validation of the Oxford Neurodevelopment Assessment (OX-NDA) in 1-year-old Brazilian children
Construction and validation of the Oxford Neurodevelopment Assessment (OX-NDA) in 1-year-old Brazilian children
Background: over 250 million children under 5 years, globally, are at risk of developmental delay. Interventions during the first 2 years of life have enduring positive effects if children at risk are identified, using standardized assessments, within this window. However, identifying developmental delay during infancy is challenging and there are limited infant development assessments suitable for use in low- and middle-income (LMIC) settings. Here, we describe a new tool, the Oxford Neurodevelopment Assessment (OX-NDA), measuring cognition, language, motor, and behaviour, outcomes in 1-year-old children. We present the results of its evaluation against the Bayley Scales of Infant Development IIIrd edition (BSID-III) and its psychometric properties.
Methods: sixteen international tools measuring infant development were analysed to inform the OX-NDA's construction. Its agreement with the BSID-III, for cognitive, motor and language domains, was evaluated using intra-class correlations (ICCs, for absolute agreement), Bland-Altman analyses (for bias and limits of agreement), and sensitivity and specificity analyses (for accuracy) in 104 Brazilian children, aged 12 months (SD 8.4 days), recruited from the 2015 Pelotas Birth Cohort Study. Behaviour was not evaluated, as the BSID-III's adaptive behaviour scale was not included in the cohort's protocol. Cohen's kappas and Cronbach's alphas were calculated to determine the OX-NDA's reliability and internal consistency respectively.
Results: agreement was moderate for cognition and motor outcomes (ICCs 0.63 and 0.68, p < 0.001) and low for language outcomes (ICC 0.30, p < 0.04). Bland-Altman analysis showed little to no bias between measures across domains. The OX-NDA's sensitivity and specificity for predicting moderate-to-severe delay on the BSID-III was 76, 73 and 43% and 75, 80 and 33% for cognition, motor and language outcomes, respectively. Inter-rater (k = 0.80-0.96) and test-rest (k = 0.85-0.94) reliability was high for all domains. Administration time was < 20 minutes.
Conclusions: the OX-NDA shows moderate agreement with the BSID-III for identifying infants at risk of cognitive and motor delay; agreement was low for language delay. It is a rapid, low-cost assessment constructed specifically for use in LMIC populations. Further work is needed to evaluate its use (i) across domains in populations beyond Brazil and (ii) to identify language delays in Brazilian children.
Infant, Humans, Child, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Brazil, Reproducibility of Results, Child Development, Language Development Disorders
Fernandes, Michelle
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Bassani, Diego
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Albernaz, Elaine
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Bertoldi, Andrea D.
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Silveira, Mariangela F
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Matijsevich, Alicia
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Anselmi, Luciana
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Cruz, Suélen
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Halal, Camila S.
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Tovo-Rodrigues, Luciana
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Cruz, Gloria Isabel Nino
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Metgud, Deepa
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Santos, Ina S.
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Fernandes, Michelle
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Bassani, Diego
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Albernaz, Elaine
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Bertoldi, Andrea D.
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Silveira, Mariangela F
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Matijsevich, Alicia
d96ecc32-8352-49e4-8494-45cb298dcc2d
Anselmi, Luciana
c4004274-8156-457d-8ba8-1b37e90bef5c
Cruz, Suélen
86c143f7-fca1-4079-a7a4-b0863156ceaf
Halal, Camila S.
644f456a-2bfc-4d94-9af9-72bec9bfce04
Tovo-Rodrigues, Luciana
46be69c3-1cf4-421a-9203-1f7f5259b58f
Cruz, Gloria Isabel Nino
53c5d20b-a82c-4efb-b24f-3726539b8206
Metgud, Deepa
b05c9292-3230-4874-b41c-827ce2775223
Santos, Ina S.
db55a8d5-a9eb-4769-a0b6-cf65912b1da2
Fernandes, Michelle, Bassani, Diego, Albernaz, Elaine, Bertoldi, Andrea D., Silveira, Mariangela F, Matijsevich, Alicia, Anselmi, Luciana, Cruz, Suélen, Halal, Camila S., Tovo-Rodrigues, Luciana, Cruz, Gloria Isabel Nino, Metgud, Deepa and Santos, Ina S.
(2022)
Construction and validation of the Oxford Neurodevelopment Assessment (OX-NDA) in 1-year-old Brazilian children.
BMC Pediatrics, 22 (1), [733].
(doi:10.1186/s12887-022-03794-1).
Abstract
Background: over 250 million children under 5 years, globally, are at risk of developmental delay. Interventions during the first 2 years of life have enduring positive effects if children at risk are identified, using standardized assessments, within this window. However, identifying developmental delay during infancy is challenging and there are limited infant development assessments suitable for use in low- and middle-income (LMIC) settings. Here, we describe a new tool, the Oxford Neurodevelopment Assessment (OX-NDA), measuring cognition, language, motor, and behaviour, outcomes in 1-year-old children. We present the results of its evaluation against the Bayley Scales of Infant Development IIIrd edition (BSID-III) and its psychometric properties.
Methods: sixteen international tools measuring infant development were analysed to inform the OX-NDA's construction. Its agreement with the BSID-III, for cognitive, motor and language domains, was evaluated using intra-class correlations (ICCs, for absolute agreement), Bland-Altman analyses (for bias and limits of agreement), and sensitivity and specificity analyses (for accuracy) in 104 Brazilian children, aged 12 months (SD 8.4 days), recruited from the 2015 Pelotas Birth Cohort Study. Behaviour was not evaluated, as the BSID-III's adaptive behaviour scale was not included in the cohort's protocol. Cohen's kappas and Cronbach's alphas were calculated to determine the OX-NDA's reliability and internal consistency respectively.
Results: agreement was moderate for cognition and motor outcomes (ICCs 0.63 and 0.68, p < 0.001) and low for language outcomes (ICC 0.30, p < 0.04). Bland-Altman analysis showed little to no bias between measures across domains. The OX-NDA's sensitivity and specificity for predicting moderate-to-severe delay on the BSID-III was 76, 73 and 43% and 75, 80 and 33% for cognition, motor and language outcomes, respectively. Inter-rater (k = 0.80-0.96) and test-rest (k = 0.85-0.94) reliability was high for all domains. Administration time was < 20 minutes.
Conclusions: the OX-NDA shows moderate agreement with the BSID-III for identifying infants at risk of cognitive and motor delay; agreement was low for language delay. It is a rapid, low-cost assessment constructed specifically for use in LMIC populations. Further work is needed to evaluate its use (i) across domains in populations beyond Brazil and (ii) to identify language delays in Brazilian children.
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s12887-022-03794-1
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e-pub ahead of print date: 23 December 2022
Keywords:
Infant, Humans, Child, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Brazil, Reproducibility of Results, Child Development, Language Development Disorders
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Local EPrints ID: 476802
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/476802
ISSN: 1471-2431
PURE UUID: 0f7bae0f-4eb2-4e41-9b2e-f7ff20f27793
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Date deposited: 16 May 2023 16:53
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:10
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Contributors
Author:
Michelle Fernandes
Author:
Diego Bassani
Author:
Elaine Albernaz
Author:
Andrea D. Bertoldi
Author:
Mariangela F Silveira
Author:
Alicia Matijsevich
Author:
Luciana Anselmi
Author:
Suélen Cruz
Author:
Camila S. Halal
Author:
Luciana Tovo-Rodrigues
Author:
Gloria Isabel Nino Cruz
Author:
Deepa Metgud
Author:
Ina S. Santos
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