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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2010 Apr 1.
Published in final edited form as: Clin Psychol Rev. 2009 Jan 25;29(3):216–229. doi: 10.1016/j.cpr.2009.01.003

Table 2.

Studies of Anxiety in Children and Adolescents with ASD with Focus on Phenomenology

Author (year) Na Sample Characteristicsb Anxiety measurec Control group(s)d Primary Findings
Bellini (2006) 41 AD(19), AS (16), PDD-NOS(6). Age range: 12-18 (M: 14); No MR P, S None Social skill deficits and physiological hyperarousal contributed to variance seen in symptoms of social anxiety in teens with ASD (R2 = .341, p < .0005).
Burnette et al. (2005) 31 HFA. Age range: NA(M: 11); VIQ M: 109; PIQ M:110 S Learning disabled(17) TD (16) Autistic subjects self-reported significantly more social anxiety F = 4.11, p = .05); no relationship was found between anxiety and weak central coherence.
Farrugia & Hudson (2006) 29 AS. Age range: 12-16 (M: 13) P, S Anxiety disordered (34); TD (30) Self-reported symptoms of anxiety were equivalent to those of teens with anxiety disorders; anxiety symptoms, neg. automatic thoughts were significantly higher than in control group.
Gillott et al. (2001) 15 HFA. Age range: 8-12 (M: 10) P, S Specific language imp (15); TD(15),age &, gender matched Rate of anxiety was higher in HFA group than in typically developing or language impaired children; 7 of 15 children with HFA were at or above clinical mean score.
Green et al. (2000) 20 AS. Age range: 11-19 (M: 13); IQ>70 Int Conduct disorder (20) Significantly greater general anxiety and OCD symptoms on clinical interview with AS than conduct disordered sample.
Juranek et al. (2006) 42 AD. Age range: 3-14) (M: 7) P None Significant correlation found between amygdala volume (total and right side) and parent-reported anxiety/depression scores
Kanai et al. (2004) 74 PDD-NOS (53), HFA (21). Age range: 2-23 (M: 6) Obs None Subjects with PDD-NOS exhibited stronger anxiety reaction than those with HFA.
Meyer et al. (2006) 31 AS. Age range: 7-13 (M:10) P, S TD (33) Child-reported social anxiety correlated with parent-report social competence.
Pearson et al. (2006) 51 AD(26), PDD NOS(25). Age range: 4-18(M:10) P None No significant differences found between children with PDD-NOS and AD on anxiety symptoms, although both groups approached clinical significance.
Pfeiffer et al. (2005) 50 AS. Age range: 6-17 (M:9) P None Significant correlation found between sensory defensiveness and anxiety in children with AD.
Russell & Sofronoff (2005) 65 AS. Ages: 10-13 (M: NA) P, S None Children with AS rated themselves equally anxious as children diagnosed with social phobia but did not endorse high levels of social worries.
Thede & Coolidge (2006) 31 AS(16), HFA (15). Age range: 5-17 (M: 10) P Age, gender matched TD (31) Children with AS had more symptoms of anxiety than did children with HFA; 10 of 16 children with AS had elevated GAD scale scores.
Tonge et al. (1999) 127 AS (52), HFA (75). Age range: 4-18 (M for AD: 7; M for AS: 9) P None Subjects with AS received higher ratings of overall psychopathology and higher anxiety ratings than the AD subjects; 65% of AD group and 85% of AS group achieved clinically significant levels of psychopathology
Weisbrot et al. (2005) 483 PDD-NOS (209), AD(170), AS (104). Age range: 3-12 (2 samples:3-5 yrs & 6-12 yrs) P, O Non-ASD, clinical referrals (326) Both parents and teachers rated school-age children with ASD as having more anxiety symptoms than non-ASD children; ASD children with more anxiety had higher rates of psychotic symptoms, similar to non-ASD children.
Williamson et al. (2008) 19 AS. Age range: 11-5 (M: 13) S Non-ASD students; age, gender, ethnicity matched (19) Youth with AS did not obtain higher total anxiety scores, but did report more obsessive-compulsive symptoms than non-ASD youth.

TD=typically developing

a

Size of ASD sample

b

Diagnosis: Number of participants with specific diagnoses. AD=Autistic Disorder, AS=Asperger’s Syndrome, HFA=High-Functioning Autism, PDD-NOS=Pervasive-Developmental Disorder-Not Otherwise Specified, ASD=sample not categorized by specific diagnoses.

c

Anxiety measure (modality): D=Direct: direct testing or assessment of child’s skills or knowledge; P=Parent: parent-report measure; O=Other: other-report (e.g., teacher); S=Self: self-rating; Obs=Coded behavioral observations; I=Interview of parent and/or child; C=Clinical observations only.

d

Composition of control group/comparison scores (N = number of subjects), if applicable. Note that only control groups ascertained as part of the study are included.