Motor-based Intervention for Childhood Apraxia of Speech: DTTC-Connect

NCT07526246 · Status: NOT_YET_RECRUITING · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 68

Last updated 2026-06-01

No results posted yet for this study

Summary

Childhood apraxia of speech (CAS) is a complex motor speech disorder that significantly limits a child's ability to communicate in daily activities, with difficulties often persisting into adolescence and adulthood. There is solid evidence that motor-based interventions, such as Dynamic Temporal and Tactile Cueing (DTTC), improve word production in children with CAS. Building on this strong foundation, the next critical step is to extend this work to support functional communication in connected speech, where children with CAS often continue to struggle. There is a critical need for a systematic bridge within the context of treatment from word-level practice to connected speech, as robust word-level gains often fail to generalize to other speaking contexts. This work addresses this gap by transitioning children from word- to phrase-level practice using Dynamic Temporal and Tactile Cueing-Connect (DTTC-Connect), a novel, structured adaptation of DTTC that targets connected speech production. Our approach builds on established DTTC principles while incorporating progression to more complex utterances, offering a developmentally appropriate, research-informed pathway to functional communication.

This study is a Phase II randomized controlled trial (RCT) designed to examine the efficacy of DTTC-Connect, a motor-based treatment that includes phrase-level practice to refine connected speech and support communicative participation for children with CAS. The overall objectives of this work are to test the efficacy of DTTC-Connect and document changes in speech motor control at the connected speech level in 68 children with CAS (3;6 - 12;11 years of age) who receive treatment twice a week for 8 weeks (16 sessions). The central hypothesis is that DTTC-Connect will lead to lasting improvements in phrase accuracy, speech intelligibility and speech motor control, ultimately enhancing a child's communicative participation.

Conditions

  • Childhood Apraxia of Speech

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Dynamic Temporal and Tactile Cueing - Connect (DTTC-Connect)

DTTC-Connect is a motor-based intervention designed to improve speech accuracy in children with CAS by targeting movement transitions within phrases. Treatment begins with selecting a target phrase identified through dynamic assessment as being within the child's optimal challenge point. Using this initial target, four additional phrases are constructed that systematically build in structural, phonetic, and grammatical complexity to support gradual progression in motor skill. Treatment begins with two-word phrases and follows the first three levels of the DTTC temporal hierarchy: Simultaneous Production → Direct Imitation → Delayed Imitation. The final step is Elicited Production where children produce the target at random intervals in the absence of a prior model. Aligned with standard DTTC, children initially receive maximal support during Simultaneous Production. As accuracy improves, support is faded and the child progresses to less supported levels of production.

Sponsors & Collaborators

  • Hofstra University

    collaborator OTHER
  • New York University

    lead OTHER

Principal Investigators

  • Maria I. Grigos, PhD · New York University

Study Design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Model
PARALLEL

Eligibility

Min Age
3 Years
Max Age
12 Years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No

Timeline & Regulatory

Start
2026-09-15
Primary Completion
2030-09-01
Completion
2031-03-31

More Related Trials

Read the full study record

This page highlights key information. For complete eligibility criteria, study locations, investigator contacts, and the full protocol, visit the original record on ClinicalTrials.gov.

View NCT07526246 on ClinicalTrials.gov