Preventing Speech and Language Disorders in Children With Classic Galactosemia
NCT03838016 · Status: COMPLETED · Phase: EARLY_PHASE1 · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 285
Last updated 2026-01-23
Summary
A critical knowledge gap is whether proactive intervention can improve speech and language outcomes in infants at known risk for communication disorders. Speech and language assessments and treatments are usually not initiated until deficits can be diagnosed, no earlier than age 2-3 years. Preventive services are not available. Children with classic galactosemia (CG) hold the keys towards investigating whether proactive services are more effective than conventional management. CG is a recessively inherited inborn error of metabolism characterized by defective conversion of galactose. Despite early detection and strict adherence to lactose-restricted diets, children with CG are at very high risk not only for motor and learning disabilities but also for severe speech sound disorder and language impairment. Delays are evident from earliest signals of communication and persist into adulthood in many cases but speech/language assessment and treatment are usually not initiated until deficits manifest. However, because CG is diagnosed via newborn screening, the known genotype-phenotype association can be leveraged to investigate the efficacy of proactive interventions during the acquisition of prespeech (2 to 12 months) and early communication skills (13 to 24 months). If this proactive intervention is more effective than standard care regarding speech and language outcomes in children with CG, this will change their clinical management from deficit-based to proactive services. It will also motivate investigating this approach in infants with other types of known risk factors, e.g., various genetic causes and very low birth weight.
The Babble Boot Camp is a program for children with CG, ages 2 to 24 months. The intervention is implemented by a pediatric speech-language pathologist (SLP) via parent training. Activities and routines are designed to foster earliest signals of communication, increase coo and babble behaviors, support the emergence of first words and word combinations, and expand syntactic complexity. The SLP meets with parents online every week for 10 to 15 minutes to provide instruction, feedback, and guidance. Close monitoring of progress is achieved via regularly administered questionnaires, a monthly day-long audio recording, and the SLPs weekly progress notes. At age 24 months, the active phase of the Babble Boot Camp ends. The children receive a professional speech/language assessment at ages 2 1/2, 3 1/2, and 4 1/2 years.
Conditions
- Classic Galactosemia
- Speech Disorders in Children
- Language Disorders in Children
Interventions
- BEHAVIORAL
-
Babble Boot Camp
The Babble Boot Camp is an experimental study to investigate whether earliest and proactive activities and routines can positively influence the speech and language development of children who were diagnosed with classic galactosemia at birth. A speech-language pathologists implements the intervention by teaching parents to foster and expand earliest signals of communication, prespeech activities such as coo and babble, vocabulary growth, sentence complexity, and use of language to communicate. Examples are intentional eye contact, reinforcing babble with rewarding play activities, and repeating a child's rudimentary sentence with slight expansions to scaffold longer sentences.
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
Washington State University
collaborator OTHER -
Arizona State University
lead OTHER
Study Design
- Allocation
- RANDOMIZED
- Purpose
- TREATMENT
- Masking
- SINGLE
- Model
- PARALLEL
Eligibility
- Min Age
- 2 Months
- Max Age
- 54 Months
- Sex
- ALL
- Healthy Volunteers
- No
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2019-05-01
- Primary Completion
- 2025-05-31
- Completion
- 2025-08-31
Countries
- United States
Study Locations
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