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Study flow diagram
Figuras y tablas -
Figure 1

Study flow diagram

Risk of bias summary: review authors' judgements about each risk of bias item for each included study.
Figuras y tablas -
Figure 2

Risk of bias summary: review authors' judgements about each risk of bias item for each included study.

Nuffield Dyspraxia Programme ‐ Third Edition (NDP‐3) versus Rapid Syllable Transition Treatment (ReST) for Childhood Apraxia of Speech

Patient or population: children aged 4 to 12 years with CAS of unknown cause

Settings: University of Sydney Communication Disorders Treatment and Research Clinic

Intervention: NDP‐3

Comparison: ReST

Outcomes

Summary of MD findings

Absolute MD

Number of participants (studies)

Quality of the evidence
(GRADE)

Comments

Primary outcomes

Accuracy of production on treated items

Measured by: counting the number of real words produced correctly (/x)

Follow‐up: pre‐intervention to 1 month post‐intervention

NDP‐3 MD of 36.0 was greater than the ReST MD of 33.9

2.1

26 (1 trial)

⊕⊕⊕⊝
Moderatea

Accuracy of production on non‐treated items

Measured by: counting the number of real words produced correctly (/x)

Follow‐up: pre‐intervention to 1 month post‐intervention

ReST MD of 18.3 was minimally greater than the NDP‐3 MD of 18.2

0.1

26 (1 trial)

⊕⊕⊕⊝
Moderate a

Secondary outcomes

Speech production consistency

Measured by: calculating the number of inconsistent productions of 25 words produced 3 times using the DEAP inconsistency subtestb

Follow‐up: pre‐intervention to 1 month post‐intervention

NDP‐3 MD of 11.1 was greater than the ReST MD of 10.9

0.2

26 (1 trial)

⊕⊕⊕⊝
Moderate a

Accuracy of connected speech

Measured by: counting the number of correct imitations of 3 word phrases (/x)

Follow‐up: pre‐intervention to 1 month post‐intervention

NDP‐3 MD of 14.3 was greater than the ReST MD of 11.5

2.8

26 (1 trial)

⊕⊕⊕⊝
Moderate a

GRADE Working Group grades of evidence

High quality: we are very confident that the true effect lies close to that of the estimate of the effect.
Moderate quality: we are moderately confident in the effect estimate; the true effect is likely to be close to the estimate of the effect, but there is a possibility that it is substantially different.
Low quality: our confidence in the effect estimate is limited; the true effect may be substantially different from the estimate of the effect.
Very low quality: we have very little confidence in the effect estimate; the true effect is likely to be substantially different from the estimate of effect.

CAS: childhood apraxia of speech; DEAP: Diagnostic Evaluation of Articulation and Phonology; MD: mean difference; NDP‐3: Nuffield Dyspraxia Programme ‐ Third Edition;ReST: Rapid Syllable Transition Treatment (ReST) for Childhood Apraxia of Speech

aWe downgraded the quality of evidence by one level, to moderate, for imprecision, as there was only one study for comparison.
bNote, a decrease in inconsistency is a positive outcome.

Figuras y tablas -
Table 1. Excluded, low‐quality evidence from observational studies (case‐series, case control)

Study

Participants

Methodology/paper type

Intervention

Intervention approach

Intervention intensity and duration

Outcome measures

Treatment outcomes

Timing of outcome measures

Methodological considerations

Baas 2008

1 male aged 12.8 years with CAS and charge syndrome

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case (AB) design)

Dynamic Temporal and Tactile Cueing

Motor

Phase I and II: sessions 4 × per week; Phase III: weekly therapy. Study over 25 months. Home practice not reported

Articulation accuracy on 2‐item scale for treated items; speech rate

Phase I (core vocabulary): change on 4/6 targets. Maintained at last probe.

Phase II (core vocabulary): reached 100% accuracy for 3/5 words. Reduction of stereotypies.

Phase III: decreased speech rate from 94 to 71 SPM

Baseline and during treatment. No longer‐term follow‐up data

Lack of experimental control, multiple baselines, control, longer‐term follow‐up or generalisation data. Clinical file data used. No replication across participants. Assessors, participants, therapists not blinded

Ballard 2010

3 siblings (2 males, 1 female) aged 7.8 and 10.10 years with CAS

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single subject multiple baseline design across behaviours and participants)

Rapid Syllable Transition Treatment (ReST)

Motor

60‐minute sessions (100‐120 trials per session), 4 × per week for 12 sessions. Home practice not reported

Reading aloud 10 treated and 10 non‐treated non‐word strings; real word generalisation data; perceptual analysis of prosodic pattern and acoustic analysis using pairwise variability index

3/3 had significant gains in treated items and generalisation to same level of treated complexity. 2/3 generalised to lower and higher complexity non‐word items. Minimal generalisation to real words

Baseline data taken at beginning of every 4th session and at 4 weeks post‐treatment

No long‐term follow‐up data. Limited participants for generalisation of outcomes. No blinding of assessors, participants or therapists. No stimulus generalisation measures

Beathard 2008

1 female aged 3 years with CAS

Not quasi‐/RCT (Case description)

Music therapy

Other (alternative interventions)

30‐minute sessions over 9 months. 24 sessions in total

Descriptive data only

Commenced non‐verbal. At end, had 11 phonemes in inventory

Pre‐treatment and post‐treatment. No follow‐up data

Lack of experimental control, multiple baselines or control data. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No replicable outcome measures. No statistical analysis. No blinding of assessors, participants or therapists. No follow‐up or generalisation data. Unclear which aspect of treatment provided outcomes or affect of maturation, schooling, etc. No replication across participants. No long‐term follow‐up data

Binger 2007

2 males aged 4.2 and 4.4 years with CAS and language disorder

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case multiple baseline across participants)

Aided AAC Modeling

Augmentative and alternative communication

15‐minute sessions, 1 to 3 × per week for 10 to 15 sessions

Frequency of use of multi‐symbol messages in play scenarios

Significantly more frequent use of multi‐symbol messages using aided AAC as well as different types of messages. Maintained and generalised gains. Increased participation

Baseline × 3, every 2nd treatment session, and at 2, 4 and 8 weeks post‐treatment

CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. Limited outcome measures. No blinding of assessors. No response generalisation data taken (only stimulus generalisation)

Binger 2008

1 female (Latino) aged 3.4 years with CAS and suspected velocardiofacial syndrome

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case multiple baseline across participants)

Aided AAC Modeling

Augmentative and alternative communication

10‐minute sessions, 1 to 3 × per week for 10 to 15 sessions

Frequency of use of multi‐symbol messages in play scenarios

Significantly more frequent use of multi‐symbol messages using aided AAC. Parental response to training excellent. Maintained and generalised gains

Baseline × 3, every 2nd treatment session, and at 2, 4 and 8 weeks post‐treatment

CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No blinding of assessors. No response generalisation data taken (only stimulus generalisation)

Binger 2011

1 female aged 6 years with CAS and language disorder

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case multiple baseline across behaviours)

Aided AAC Modeling

Augmentative and alternative communication

15‐minute sessions, 1 to 3 × per week for 10 to 15 sessions

Frequency of use of grammatical morphemes

Significantly more frequent use of grammatical morphemes using aided AAC. 2nd intervention period needed for 2/3 targets. Maintained gains

Baseline × 3, every treatment session, and 2, 4 and 8 weeks post‐treatment

CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No blinding of assessors. No response generalisation data taken (only stimulus generalisation)

Bornman 2001

1 male aged 6.6 years with CAS, hemiplegia and seizures

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case (ABA) design)

Voice output devices (Macaw)

Augmentative and alternative communication

60‐minute sessions for 2 sessions (training). Home practice focus

Frequency of appropriate responses to questions in structured discourse

Mother provided greater frequency and type of questions. Frequency of appropriate responses increased

2 × baseline, 2 × practice period, 1 × post‐treatment, and 4 weeks post‐treatment

Lack of experimental control, multiple baselines or control data.
CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No statistical analysis.
Limited outcome measures. No blinding of assessors. Unclear dosage of home practice. No generalisation data. No long‐term follow‐up data

Carter 2004

1 male and 1 female aged 12 and 8 years respectively diagnosed with CAS. Additional 8 children (7 males) aged 4 to 7 years with persistent articulation errors

Not quasi‐/RCT (Case series ‐ single group study)

Electropalatography (EPG) on /t, d, k, g, s, z/

Motor

30‐minute sessions, 1 × per week for 10 weeks

Per cent consonants correct (PCC) and Probe Scoring System (PSS) on probe of 43 words

Significant difference noted for PSS for whole group. PCC scores improved in percentage

Pre‐treatment (baseline first session) and post‐treatment

Lack of experimental control, multiple baselines or control data. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No follow‐up or generalisation data. No blinding of assessors

Culp 1989

1 female aged 8 years with CAS and intellectual disability

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case (ABA) design)

Partners in Augmentative Communication Training (PACT)

Augmentative and alternative communication

30 to 90‐minute sessions daily after 3 days of intensive training. Home practice focus

Ratio of parent vs participant messages; ratio of successful/intelligible messages from child

Participant had greater frequency of messages compared to parent, and slightly higher frequency of successful measures (high baseline accuracy). Increased participation

Pre‐treatment and 2 months post‐treatment

Lack of experimental control, multiple baselines or control data. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No statistical analysis. Limited outcome measures.
No blinding of assessors. No immediate post‐treatment data or generalisation data. No replication across participants

Cumley 1999

2 females and 1 male aged 3.4, 8 and 12.9 years respectively, with CAS (2 with intellectual disability and 1 with submucous cleft)

Not quasi‐/RCT (3 case studies/reports)

Combined communication boards and voice output devices

Augmentative and alternative communication

3.4‐year‐old: 2 to 3 × per week for 12 weeks

8‐year‐old: daily for 6 months

12‐year‐old: not reported

3.4‐year‐old: MLU.

8‐year‐old: assessment of phonological processes; communication repairs.

12‐year‐old: description of functional communication

3.4‐year old: minimal speech improvement, MLU increased to WNL

8‐year old: no change in speech, parent report of greater communication repairs, and less frustration

12‐year old: supplemented natural speech to initiate, maintain and repair communication

Pre‐assessment and treatment descriptions

Lack of experimental control, multiple baselines or control data. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No statistical analysis. Limited outcome measures.
No blinding of assessors. No immediate post‐treatment data or generalisation data. No replication across participants

Dale 2013

3 males and 1 female aged 3.6 to 6 years diagnosed with CAS

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single subject (ABB or ABC) design)

Prompts for Restructuring Oral Muscular Phonetic Targets (PROMPT) ‐ full programme (FP) for 8 weeks versus PROMPT without tactile‐kinaesthetic‐proprioceptive cueing for 4 weeks and FP for 4 weeks

Motor

50‐minute session, 2 × per week for 8 weeks

Trained words on probe, untrained words. Pre‐post testing on the DEAP, TOCS+, VMPAC focal motor and sequencing subtests and Vineland socialization scales

2/4 improved on DEAP. 4/4 improved on TOCS+, VMPAC subtests and Vineland. All 4 showed greater improvement on easier targets and majority maintained to 3 months post‐treatment. Generalisation to untrained items noted

Probe words: baseline × 3, treatment × 4, post‐treatment, and 3 months post‐treatment

Lack of experimental control as control data changed and interpreted as generalisation but no other control used (e.g. multiple baselines). CAS diagnosis concerning prosody unclear. Blinded assessors for only some outcomes. No withdrawal period between treatment phases and participant differences made comparison between conditions difficult. All measures not taken at consistent times

Edeal 2011

2 males aged 6.2 and 3.4 years with CAS (1 case with repaired cleft lip and palate and language disorder)

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case (AB) design)

Integral Stimulation (Dynamic Temporal and Tactile Cueing)

Motor

Varied across participants. 40‐minute sessions (15 minutes each condition plus probes). 1 case: 3 × per week for 11 weeks.
1 case: 2 × per week for 5 weeks

Probe data on targeted phonemes (articulation) in words for each participant. 1 phoneme targeted with high production frequency = 100 trials and another with moderate production frequency = 60 trials. Articulation and language sample taken at 2 weeks post‐treatment

Large effect sizes for high production frequency and moderate for moderate production frequency. Improvement in PCC and phoneme inventory post‐treatment. Some generalisation

Baseline × 3, each treatment session, and 1 probe post‐treatment

Lack of experimental control, multiple baselines or control data. No long‐term follow‐up data. No blinding of assessors. Accuracy based on if target phoneme was correct (including cognate pair substitution) not if whole word was correct

Hall 1989

1 female aged 9 years with mild CAS (followed until 12 years)

Not quasi‐/RCT (Case study/report)

Articulation therapy, motor‐programming remedial model

Motor

5 school semesters

Templin‐Darley Tests of Articulation

Remediation of all 31 items for /r/, /ɝ/ and /ɚ/

Test completed each semester

Lack of experimental control, multiple baselines or control data. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No statistical analysis. Limited outcome measures.
No blinding of assessors. No follow‐up data or generalisation data. No replication across participants. No stimulus generalisation measures

Harris 1996

1 male aged 5 years with CAS and language disorder

Not quasi‐/RCT (Multiple baseline across discourse contexts)

Computer‐based AAC

Augmentative and alternative communication

4‐minute sessions, 2 × per week for 22 sessions over 4 months

Frequency of noun/verb phrases in reciprocal book reading and structured discourse

Improvement in both contexts but more so in book reading than discourse. Some generalisation

Baseline, treatment, and withdrawal probes

CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No statistical analysis. Limited outcome measures. No follow‐up data. No blinding of assessors. No replication across participants

Helfrich‐Miller 1994

3 children (2 males, 1 female) aged 2.9 to 8 years with CAS

Not quasi‐/RCT (Case study series)

Melodic Intonation therapy (MIT)

Linguistic and motor

Varied. 37 to 71 sessions

Varied. Description of skills, consonant inventories, sequencing error rates and intelligibility compared to typical development

Child 1: all consonants in inventory

Child 2: spoke in complex sentences, poor intelligibility, and articulation errors present.

Child 3: sequencing error rate dropped from 75% to 22%. 13/18 consonant sounds improved

Pre‐ and post‐treatment

No experimental control. Lack of information on diagnosis of CAS. Primarily descriptive measures ‒ not reliable or tested using statistics. No control, maintenance or generalisation data

Iuzzini 2010

4 children (2 males, 2 females) aged 3.7 to 6.10 years with CAS

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case design)

Stimulability (STP) and modified Core Vocabulary (mCVT) used concurrently

Linguistic and motor

55‐minute sessions (10 minutes STP, 45 minutes mCVT), 2 × per week for 20 sessions. No home practice

Per cent phonemes correct, phonetic inventory and inconsistency

PCC increased on average 20% after combined therapy (range 9% to 32%). Inventory gained 5 phones on average (range 1 to 10). 3/4 had greater consistency on CSIP and ISP after therapy; 1 had greater inconsistency

Pre‐ and post‐ treatment

Poor experimental control as stable baseline not established, lack of control data. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No statistical analysis. No blinding of assessors. No immediate post‐treatment data or generalisation data

Jaroma 1984

1 male aged 5.5 years with "some dyspraxic features" (CAS diagnosis not explicit)

Not quasi‐/RCT (Case study)

Sensory integrative therapy and speech therapy

Motor

Daily sessions for 2 months

(SP only) Illinois Test of Psycholinguistic Abilities

Test not completed post‐treatment. Observation of greater self‐monitoring and correction of speech

Pre‐treatment only

Lack of experimental control, multiple baselines or control data. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No statistical analysis. Limited outcome measures and no post‐treatment data.
No blinding of assessors. No immediate post‐treatment data or generalisation data. No replication across participants.
Lack of information on speech therapy provided

Kadis 2014

14 children (9 males, 5 females) aged 3 to 6 years with diagnosed CAS (compared to 14 age‐matched controls)

Not quasi‐/RCT (Case series pre‐post design)

Prompts for Restructuring Oral Muscular Phonetic Targets (PROMPT)

Motor

2 × per week for 8 weeks (16 sessions in total)

GFTA2, HCAPP,

VMPAC, MRI

Significant gains as a group for all speech measures

1‐week pre‐treatment (baseline), 1‐week post‐treatment

CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. Age‐matched control group older than CAS group. Limited information on PROMPT targets selected for replication. No blinding of assessors. No stimulus generalisation measures

King 2013

3 males aged 4.1, 5.8 and 8.6 years diagnosed with CAS. 1 of the 3 diagnosed with Opitz FG syndrome and another with PDD‐NOS

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single subject multiple baseline across participants design)

Integrated Multimodal Intervention (structured book reading, drill and play activities with AAC devices present and speech encouraged)

Augmentative and alternative communication

1‐hour sessions, 2 × per week for 3 to 6 weeks

Category (e.g. vocalisation, AAC or both), type of word and accuracy targets.

Case 1: final consonants.

Case 2: initial /s/ clusters then /f/.

Case 3: initial /s/ clusters

Increases in vocalisations/spoken speech noted for 3/3. Speech accuracy improved on targets for 1/3 cases but all showed some generalisation to more accurate everyday speech

Baseline probes, probes every 2nd treatment session, 1‐month post‐treatment

Poor experimental control for case 1 and some change on control data noted. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No statistical analysis. Limited outcome measures.
No blinding of assessors. No generalisation data. No long‐term treatment data

Klick 1985

1 female aged 5.6 years with CAS

Not quasi‐/RCT (Case description)

Adapted Cueing Technique

Motor

30 minutes of therapy per day for 6 months

Number of single words/utterances

From 2 to 4 words to 12 words and several carrier phrases. After 6 months began to produce novel sentences

Description of progress during treatment

Lack of experimental control, multiple baselines or control data. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No statistical analysis. Limited outcome measures.
No blinding of assessors. No follow‐up or generalisation data. No replication across participants

Krauss 1982

2 males aged 5 and 6 years diagnosed with CAS

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case (ABAA) design)

Concurrent Melodic Intonation Therapy (MIT) and traditional therapy (20% and 80% of sessions respectively)

Linguistic and motor

2 × per week over 2‐month period

Pre‐ and post‐treatment gains on word‐morpheme usage, auditory comprehension, naming, describing function, sentence completion, imitation of word phrases and articulation. Tested using language sampling and Porch Index of Communicative Ability in Children

Significant gains were found in phrase length (MLU), picture naming, and verbal imitation tasks. Little change in articulation

Pre‐treatment, post‐traditional therapy, and post‐MIT therapy

Lack of experimental control, multiple baselines or control data. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable.
No blinding of assessors. No immediate post‐treatment data or generalisation data. No long‐term follow‐up. There were no reliability data reported for language sample analysis, a subjective measure

Lagasse 2012

2 males aged 5 and 6 years with suspected CAS

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case (AB) design)

Melodic Intonation Therapy (MIT) compared to 'traditional speech‐language therapy'

Linguistic and motor

Ongoing 1 × per week speech therapy (traditional articulation sessions) and 40‐minute MIT music sessions over 4 weeks (both treatments concurrent)

GFTA2; KLPA2 and speech production on stimulable sounds in 1‐ or 2‐syllable words

Case 1 made greater gains in MIT sessions (but only 2% gain). Case 2 made greater gains on traditional articulation therapy (15% gain)

Pre‐ and post‐ treatment

Lack of experimental control, multiple baselines or control data. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No statistical analysis. Limited outcome measures.
No blinding of assessors. No follow‐up or generalisation data

Lüke 2016

1 German‐speaking male aged 2.7 years with severe CAS

Single case design (A‐B design with 3 follow‐up assessments post‐treatment with some treatment sessions between assessments)

Speech Generating Devices ‒ fixed display (Gotalk 20+) and dynamic display (DynaVox V)

Augmentative and alternative communication

45‐minute sessions × 50 treatment sessions. Treatment sessions 2 to 28 days apart

Means of communication (oral versus SGD), intelligibility of speech productions, consistency of speech productions, lexical development, and grammatical development

Significantly more communication initially with SGD than speech; significant increase in speech intelligibility; consistency (however reduced data in baseline period); amount of words used; and increased MLU and inflections after 8 to 9 sessions

Baseline × 3, every 2nd treatment session, and 2, 4 and 8 weeks post‐treatment

Lack of baseline data for consistency. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No blinding of assessors. No clear withdrawal phase after treatment with SGDs for control and no generalisation data

Lundeborg 2007

1 female aged 5.1 years with CAS

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case cross‐over design)

Intra‐oral stimulation and electropalatography

Motor

25‐minute sessions (5 minutes intra‐oral stim, 20 minutes EPG); daily at home, total of 195 sessions in 12 months

Per cent consonants correct, per cent phonemes correct, per cent words correct, intelligibility, visual deviancy

Significant treatment outcomes on all measures

Pre‐testing, A1 (baseline), B (intervention: oral stimulation therapy), A2 (withdrawal for 3 months), B (intervention: EPG), and A3 (follow‐up)

Cross‐over design, no control group or data taken to control for maturation. No replication across participants. No long‐term follow‐up or generalisation data taken

Maas 2012a

4 children (2 males, 2 females) aged 5.4 to 8.4 years with CAS (2 also with dysarthria and a third with language disorder); 3 also in Maas 2012b, as below

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case alternating treatments design with multiple baselines across behaviours over
2 phases)

Dynamic Temporal and Tactile Cueing (high versus moderate feedback frequency in cross‐over design)

Motor

50‐minute sessions 3 × per week for 3 participants but 1 had 60‐minute sessions 2 × per week

Per cent accuracy on 2‐point scale of segmental and suprasegmental aspects of target words and phrases with 2 words

2 responded better to low frequency feedback, 1 to high frequency feedback, and 1 to no condition. No generalisation effects

Weekly probes: 3 to 4 × baseline, 4 × treatment. Phase 1: 4 to 5 × withdrawal, 4 × treatment. Phase 2: 2 × withdrawal and 1 month post‐treatment

Small sample size with heterogeneity. Cross‐over conditions made comparison difficult regarding targets chosen. No control group. Effect sizes used not interpretable or comparable to others. Different doses across all participants. Treatment fidelity < 80%. No stimulus generalisation measures

Maas 2012b

4 children (2 males and 2 females) aged 5.0 to 7.9 years with CAS. 2 cases had additional dysarthria diagnoses.

1 other case had multiple co‐occurring disorders

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case alternating treatments design with multiple baselines across behaviours over
2 phases)

Dynamic Temporal and Tactile Cueing (random versus blocked practice compared in cross‐over design)

Motor

2 × 4 week blocks of therapy

Per cent accuracy on 2‐point scale of segmental and suprasegmental aspects of entire target words and phrases with 2 words

3/4 responded to both conditions. 2 responded relatively better to blocked practice, 1 to random practice, and 1 to no condition. 2/4 demonstrated generalization

Weekly probes: 3 to 4 × baseline, 4 × treatment. Phase 1: 4 to 5 × withdrawal, 4 × treatment. Phase 2: 2 × withdrawal and 1 month post‐treatment

Small sample size with heterogeneity. Cross‐over conditions made comparison difficult regarding targets chosen. No control group. Effect sizes used not interpretable or comparable to others. Treatment fidelity < 80%. No stimulus generalisation measures

Martikainen 2011

1 female aged 4.7 years with CAS

Not quasi‐/RCT (Multiple baseline across behaviours ‐ cross‐over treatment design)

Combined Melodic Intonation Therapy (MIT) and Touch Cue Method (TCM)

Motor and linguistic

3 sessions for 6 weeks for 18 sessions for MIT. 6 weeks no therapy. 3 sessions for 6 weeks for 18 sessions for TCM

Articulation accuracy: PVC, PCC. Also, overall word accuracy scores: PMLU, PWP, PWC.

All calculated from responses to 46 picture cards

1/5 measures significant post‐MIT (per cent vowels correct). Per cent consonants correct also reduced.

3/5 significant post‐TCM (PVC, PCC, PMLU).

PVC, PCC and PMLU maintained.

Greater changes for both therapies after withdrawal. PCC and PMLU only significant after MIT withdrawn

Beginning and end of 6‐week baseline, beginning and end of both treatment phases, 12 weeks after TCM withdrawn

Lack of experimental control of other factors. Cross‐over design makes comparison of both treatments difficult as many changes only noted after withdrawal of MIT (accumulation effects). Limited outcome data. Lack of generalisation data No blinded assessors. No replication across participants

Martin 2016

12 children (sex unknown) aged 3 to 10 years with CAS (11 with co‐occurring conditions)

Case series (pre and post design)

DuBard Association Method®. It is a multimodal, phonetic therapy which works from accurate sounds in isolation

Motor

Daily in small groups in a school programme for an 11‐month period

Articulation, mean length of utterance (MLU), and intelligibility on Arizona Articulation Proficiency
Scale‐Third Revision (AAPS‐3) and perceptions of resilience judged by parents and SLPs

Significant changes in articulation, intelligibility and MLU, and some resilience measures over 2‐year period

Pre‐ and post‐ treatment

Lack of experimental control regarding maturation effects (despite using the Intervention Efficiency Index and Proportional Change Index) and lack of control of covariate, including other potential intervention over the same period. No control group. No follow‐up or generalisation data

McCabe 2014

4 males aged 5.5 to 8.6 years with CAS. 2 children had additional auditory processing impairments

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case (AB) design with 1 month follow‐up)

Rapid Syllable Transition Treatment (ReST)

Motor

60‐minute session, 4 × per week for 3 weeks (12 sessions in total). Minimum of 1200 trials per session

Articulation, prosodic and simultaneous articulation and prosodic accuracy on trained and untrained probe pseudo words; PCC, PVC and per cent lexical stress matches from connected speech; PPVT‐4 as control data

All 4 participants increased perceptual accuracy. 1/4 participants showed change in untreated items. All participants showed change in prosody (average prosody gain 58%, 3/4 in PVC and 2/4 in PCC; average gain 79%). Control data (receptive vocabulary on PPVT‐IV) changed minimally

Baseline × 2, probes in treatment × 2, 1 month follow‐up

There was no immediate post‐treatment data taken to determine treatment effects, the follow‐up data was 1 month post‐treatment and included a withdrawal phase. There was no statistical analysis of connected speech data. 1 participant reached ceiling. No blinding of assessors. No stimulus generalisation measures

McNeill 2009a

12 children (9 males, 3 females) aged 4.2 to 7.6 years with CAS

Not quasi‐/RCT (Case series design)

Integrated Phonological Awareness Intervention

Linguistic

45‐minute session; 2 × per week for 6 weeks in 2 blocks with 6‐week withdrawal between blocks. Total of 245 sessions

Trained speech accuracy and phonological awareness accuracy on a probe. Generalisation‐ BTOPP and first trial of DEAP inconsistency subtest for PVC, PVC and inconsistency score. PIPA for 4‐year‐olds. TOPA for 5 to 7‐year‐olds. Burt Word Reading Test for non‐word reading and informal non‐word reading probe (Gillon 2000). Per cent grapheme correct score in spelling 10 words from DEAP inconsistency subtest

Speech: 9/12 children improved on trained items. Phonological awareness: 8/12 children improved in 1 or both intervention blocks. Generalisation for 8/12 on all measures except Burt Word Reading Test

Pre‐ and post‐treatment

Lack of experimental control, control group or control data. CAS diagnosis unclear regarding prosody. Limited information provided on each participant. Limited treatment phase data. No maintenance data. No blinding of assessors

McNeill 2009b

2 male identical twins aged 4.5 years with CAS (deletion at 10q21.2‐22.1)

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case design)

Integrated Phonological Awareness intervention

Linguistic

45‐minute session; 2 × per week for 6 weeks in 2 blocks with 6‐week withdrawal between blocks. Total of 245 sessions

PPC, PVC on BTOPP, and DEAP inconsistency percentage. PIPA, PhonRep, Burt Word Reading, Non‐word Reading, Neale accuracy and comprehension

PCC and PVC improved at post‐treatment and follow‐up. Reduced inconsistency. Sound‐letter knowledge increased from 0 to 7 at post‐treatment. Reading WNL and spelling demonstrated use of strategies at final follow‐up

Pre‐ and post‐ treatment, and 6‐month follow‐up

Lack of experimental control, control group or control data. CAS diagnosis unclear regarding prosody. Limited information provided on each participant. Limited treatment phase data. No maintenance data. No blinding of assessors. No stimulus generalisation measures

McNeill 2010

12 children (9 males, 3 females) aged 4.2 to 7.6 years diagnosed with CAS

Not quasi‐/RCT (12‐month follow‐up to 2009 case series)

Integrated Phonological Awareness intervention

Linguistic

As per McNeill 2009a

BBTOP and 1st trial of DEAP yielding PPC. PIPA for 4‐year‐olds & TOPA for 5 to 7‐year‐olds. Decoding measures (Burt Word Reading Test and Non‐word Reading Task) and spelling measures (probe of 10 words from the DEAP inconsistency subtest) were completed for participants at least 6 years of age at the beginning of the study. The NARA was administered for participants aged 5 years, 6 months and up

Significant difference for CAS group from pre‐ to post‐treatment on letter knowledge, non‐word reading probe, spelling, PCC, TOPA and Burt Non‐Word Reading. 3/7 improved on NARA to age‐appropriate level

1‐year follow‐up to McNeill 2009a

7/12 of original participants followed up. Whole group data ‒ case series. No control group or control data for experimental control or maturation effects

Moriarty 2006

3 children (2 males, 1 female) aged 6.3, 6.10 and 7.3 years with CAS

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case multiple baseline design across behaviours)

Integrated Phonological Awareness Intervention

Linguistic

45‐minute sessions 3 × per week for 3 weeks

PPC on probe, phoneme segmentation probe, phoneme manipulation probes, initial sound identification probes, letter‒sound knowledge subtest from the PIPA, non‐word reading tasks

2/3 significantly increased PPC, 2/3 significantly improved phonological awareness skills on probes, letter‒sound knowledge, and non‐word reading. Limited transfer to untreated words

Baseline and post‐treatment (3 probes each)

Lack of control group and control data. CAS diagnosis unclear regarding prosody. Lack of multiple baseline data throughout treatment. No long‐term follow‐up. No blinding of assessors

Namasivayam 2013

12 children (9 males, 3 females) aged 3 to 6 years with speech sound disorders

Not quasi‐/RCT (Case series pre‐post design)

Prompts for Restructuring Oral Muscular Phonetic Targets (PROMPT)

Motor

45‐minute session 2 × per week for 8 weeks

GFTA2, HCAPP, VMPAC focal motor and sequencing subtests, Children's Speech Intelligibility Measure

Significant gains as a group for all speech measures

Baseline 1 week prior to treatment, and 1 week post‐treatment

Lack of experimental control, control group, multiple baseline or control data. No blinding of assessors. No blinding of assessors. No long‐term follow‐up

Namasivayam 2015

37 children (28 males, 9 females) aged 2.6 to 4.5 years with CAS

Not quasi‐/RCT (pre‐postgroup design)

Motor Speech Treatment Protocol (MSTP)

Motor

Intense treatment group: 45‐minute session, 2 × per week × 10 weeks = 20 sessions. Less intense group: 45‐minute session, 1 × per week × 10 weeks = 10 sessions

GFTA‐2 sounds in words subtest; speech intelligibility using Children's Speech Intelligibility Measure (CSIM) at word level, and Beginner's Intelligibility Test (BIT) at sentence level. Functional Outcomes for Children Under Six (FOCUS) scale

Intense group had greater changes in articulation and functional communication compared to the less intense group with large effect sizes. Mixed results were found for intelligibility: at word‐level (CSIM), both the less intense and 1/2 intense groups made a significant and large change. At sentence level, 1/2 intense groups made a significant change

Pre‐ and post‐ treatment

No control group or control data. Participants were not directly randomised; however, no between‐group differences were found at baseline. There were missing data (dealt with using intention‐to‐treat analysis). No information on session trials was obtained, which is important for intensity calculations

Preston 2013

6 males aged 9 to 15 years with CAS. 1 child had additional ADHD and another child had additional dysarthria

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case multiple baseline across behaviours across participants)

Ultrasound biofeedback (targeting articulation on clusters and CV or VC sequences of inaccurate phones)

Motor (instrumentally based)

60 minute sessions, 2 × per week × 18 sessions (at least 150 trials per session)

Probe of whole‐word accuracy of treated and untreated items

U002 and U007 had significant gains on 2/4 treated combinations, U005 for 3/4, and U008, U009 and U012 had significant gains on all treated combinations. All exhibited some generalisation (target‐dependant). U005, U007, U008, U009, U012 demonstrated maintenance above pre‐treatment levels

Probes at baseline × 3, every treatment session, post‐treatment, and 2 months post‐treatment

No control group or comparison treatment. No blinding of assessors. Untreated items were not clearly selected as control or generalisation data with some showing change and others not

Preston 2016

3 male children aged 11 to 13 years diagnosed with CAS and poor expressive language and phonological processing. 1 participant had additional flaccid dysarthria, ADHD, language and learning difficulties

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case multiple baseline across behaviours (syllable positions))

Ultrasound biofeedback (using structured chaining and principles of motor learning)

Motor (instrumentally based)

1 hour sessions × 14 sessions. Sessions 1 to 7 addressed target 1 and sessions 8 to 14 addressed target 2 with randomly assigned prosody or no prosody conditions

Treatment acquisition data, generalisation probe of untreated words, maintenance to 2 months post‐treatment

2/3 participants acquired accurate articulation. 0/3 demonstrated generalisation or maintenance

3 × baseline probes, midway therapy probe, post‐therapy probe (within 1 week after treatment), and 2‐month follow‐up

No control group. Greater within‐treatment probes and post‐treatment probes would have allowed for greater statistical analysis. No control data. No blinding of assessors. No stimulus generalisation measures

Preston 2017

3 males aged 11 to 14 years with CAS

Not quasi/RCT

(Single case (ABA) design)

Ultrasound biofeedback (using structured chaining and principles of motor learning.)

Motor (Instrumentally based)

2 × 1‐hour articulation treatment a day for 2 weeks. 16 hours of therapy in total. Over 100 trials per session

Treatment acquisition of /ɹ/, /s/ or /ʧ/. Generalisation to untrained items using a probe and sentence imitation task, and maintenance 1 to 3 weeks post‐treatment (audio‐samples submitted)

Case 1 had acquisition, generalisation, and maintenance of targets. Case 2 had some acquisition in the 2nd week of therapy and no generalisation and maintenance. Case 3 showed acquisition, limited generalisation to words and not phrases, and no maintenance

Probe conducted 1 × before treatment, at the end of the first week, and at the end of the second week (post‐treatment)

Lack of experimental control, multiple baselines or control data. No blinding of assessors. No long‐term follow‐up data. No stimulus generalisation measures

Ray 2003

1 adult with CAS and class III malocclusion. Another 5 adults aged 18 to 23 years with persistent articulation disorders

Not quasi‐/RCT (Case series)

Orofacial myofunctional therapy

Motor (Instrumentally based)

45‐minute session, 1 × per week for 6 weeks

Dworkin‐Culatta Oral Mechanism Examination for oral postures and intelligibility in single words, sentences, and spontaneous speech

All improved lips and tongue postures. 5/6 participants increased intelligibility. No improvement in intelligibility for person with DVD

Pre‐ and post‐treatment

Lack of experimental control, multiple baselines or control data. No treatment data or follow‐up reported. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No statistical analysis. Limited outcome measures.
No blinding of assessors. No immediate post‐treatment data or generalisation data. No replication across participants

Rosenbek 1974

1 female aged 9 years with CAS

Not quasi‐/RCT (Case study)

Intensive, systematic drill motor therapy

Motor

22 sessions over 3 months

20‐item probe of /r/ (target), ineligibility in spontaneous speech

/r/ improved from 0 to 20 correct in probe. Intelligibility judged by unfamilar listeners improved

Treatment sessions

Lack of experimental control, multiple baselines or control data. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No follow‐up data. Only ancedotal generalisation data. No statistical analysis. No reliability of judgments reported. No replication across participants

Rosenthal 1994

4 children (3 males, 1 female) aged 10‐14 years diagnosed with CAS

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single subject (ABAB) design)

Rate Control Therapy

Linguistic and motor

20‐minute session per reading passage. No further information available

Articulation accuracy (words read correctly)

Improved to 85% accuracy at 50% habitual rate and maintained in therapy as rate was slowly increased. Limited generalisation to conversation ‐ therapy implemented

Reading rate in 5‐minute intervals

Lack of control and follow‐up data. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No statistical analysis. No blinding of assessors. No stimulus generalisation measures. No report of data reliability

Skelton 2014

3 children (2 males, 1 female) aged 4 to 6 years diagnosed with CAS

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case multiple baseline design across participants)

Concurrent treatment (using randomised variable practice)

Motor

Therapy until target sounds reached 80% accuracy. P1 had 26, P2 had 12 and P3 had 28 sessions. 2 × per week, 30 minutes per session and on average 100 to 115 trials per session

Per cent correct productions on /s, z, f, v/ trained targets during baseline and treatment; generalisation probes to untrained words and 3‐word phrases

All children reached 80% accuracy on target sounds. Moderate to large generalisation effects at word and 3‐word phrases levels (70% to 100% accuracy)

3 × baseline probes, probes every 5 therapy sessions

No post‐treatment or follow‐up/maintenance data. No blinded assessors. No stimulus generalisation data. P3 continued regular school therapy during the study so could be a confounding factor. No stimulus generalisation measures

Stokes 2010

1 male aged 7 years with residual CAS

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case (ABA) design)

Articulation with facilitative vowel contexts

Linguistic

45‐ to 55‐minute session, 3 × per week for 3 weeks. 60+ trials per session. Home practice provided

Accuracy on 'sh' sound in word initial probe, 'tr' as control

Significant improvement in 'sh' articulation accuracy in trained and untrained words. No change in control words with 'tr' initial

Pre‐treatment, mid‐therapy × 2 (after sessions 3 and 6), post‐treatment, and maintenance (2 weeks post‐treatment)

Participant did not meet current CAS criteria. Lack of generalisation data beyond 'sh' sound. No blinded assessors. No replication across participants. No long‐term follow‐up data. No reliability of data reported

Strand 2000

1 female aged 5 years with "severe motor planning deficits but no dysarthria" (CAS)

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case multiple baseline design)

Integral stimulation

Motor

30‐ to 50‐minute session, 3 to 5 × per week (1 to 2 × per day) for 10 to 16 sessions. No home practice

Articulation accuracy ratings on a 2‐point scale

Improvement from 0.25 to 0.80 on 2‐point scale. 4/5 treatment stimuli achieved rating of 2/2 by end of therapy

Treated stimuli at start of each session, control stimuli twice a week

No statistical analysis. Limited outcome measures.
No blinding of assessors. No follow‐up data or generalisation data. No replication across participants

Strand 2006

4 males aged 5.5 to 6.1 years with CAS (2 with dysarthria and 1 with mild intellectual disability)

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case multiple baseline across participants)

Dynamic Temporal and Tactile Cueing

Motor

30‐minute sessions, 2 × per day for 5 days a week for 38 to 50 sessions

Articulation accuracy on a 3‐point scale

Treatment gains for 3/4 participants maintained by 2/4

Baseline × 4 (or more, staggered baseline), 20+ treatment probes

No follow‐up or generalisation data. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No statistical analysis. Limited outcome measures

Thomas 2014

4 children (2 males, 2 females) aged 4.8 to 8 years with CAS

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case multiple baseline across participants and behaviours)

Rapid Syllable Transition Treatment (ReST)

Motor

50 minute sessions 2 × per week for 6 weeks. 100 trials per session

Accuracy on imitated (a) treated words, (b) untreated pseudo words, (c) untreated real words and control words

Significant improvement on treated words and untreated real words. Significant improvement for 2/4 participants on untreated pseudo words. No change in control items

Baseline × 3 to 6, treatment × 3, and 1 day, 1 month and 4 months post‐treatment

Use of GFTA2 for control items. No stimulus generalisation data

Thomas 2016

5 children (4 males, 1 female) aged 5 to 11 years with CAS (3 with mild or moderate receptive language disorder)

Not quasi‐/RCT
(Single case multiple baseline across participants)

Rapid Syllable Transition Treatment (ReST)

Motor (instrumentally based ‐ telehealth)

60‐minute session, 4 times a week for 3 weeks (12 sessions in total). Minimum of 1200 trials per session

Accuracy on treated pseud‐word items, generalisation to untreated non‐words and real words, and control items (articulation of rhotics) on a probe; client/family satisfaction with telehealth treatment

5/5 participants demonstrated significant change in treated items. 4/5 maintained gains to 4 months post‐treatment. 4/5 had significant generalisation to untrained non‐words and real words, and 1/5 demonstrated change in control data (articulation errors of rhotics or /s/). Families very satisfied and motivated by telehealth treatment

At least 3 baseline probes, 3 therapy probes (sessions 5, 9 and 1 day post‐treatment). Follow‐up at 1 week, 4 weeks & 4 months post‐treatment

Missing data for some participants at certain time points in Table 3. Problems with change in control data. Some internet issues (dropouts, port sound quality, etc.) were observed in 61% of sessions; however, significant outcomes were found. No stimulus generalisation data

Tierney 2016

1 male aged 3 years with CAS and fine motor delay

Not quasi‐/RCT

(Single case design; descriptive)

Multimodal therapy: Signed Exact English sign language, Sarah Rosenfeld Johnson's oro‐motor programme and Kaufman Speech Praxis Program

Augmentative and alternative communication

Clinic‐based sessions 45 minutes 1 to 2 × per week and home‐based sessions for 60 minutes 1 × per week

Language assessment; observations and Kaufman Speech Praxis Test; Verbal Motor
Production Assessment for Children (VMPAC)

Receptive and expressive language consistently in average range but receptive relatively better than expressive language. By 3.6 years of age receptive and expressive language same level. Marked drooling and limited inventory and sequencing at 18 months, yet skills on Kaufman & VMPAC in average range at 3 years, 9 months. Discharged from therapy

Language assessment at 1.1 year, 3 years and 3.6 years. Kaufman test or observations at 1.6, 3 and 3.9 years. VMPAC at 3 years, 9 months

Lack of experimental control, multiple baselines or control data. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable regarding prosody and drooling. No statistical analysis.
No blinding of assessors. No replication across participants. Limited repeated measures on same instrument. Participant had multiple therapies concurrently

Vashdi 2013

1 male aged 14 years with severe CAS and limb/motor apraxia and obsessive compulsive disorder

Not quasi‐/RCT (Case study)

Verbal Motor Learning (with Dynamic Distal Stabilization Technique (DDST))

Motor

1 × 30‐minute clinic session and 6 × home practice sessions a week for 4 weeks

(1) Producing highest pitch using /I/ sound with and without DDST, to determine minimum and maximum frequency and length using Speech Analyser 1.5

(2) Imitation of 18 words to analyse word length, maximum loudness, maximum and minimum frequency

Significant t‐test results for (1) increase in maximum frequency and length of pitch after DDST, no change in minimum frequency, and (2) decrease in word length (word said faster), maximum loudness, and maximum frequency

Pre‐ and post‐ treatment

Lack of experimental control, multiple baselines or control data. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No statistical analysis. Limited outcome measures.
No blinding of assessors. No follow‐up or generalisation data. No replication across participants. Unclear data analysis procedures (unclear if they used visual analysis or perceptual analysis, and if they tested assumptions for the statistical analysis completed)

Vashdi 2014

1 female aged 10 years with CAS and ASD

Not quasi‐/RCT (Case study)

Verbal Motor Learning (Initial Phoneme Cue (IPC) technique)

Motor

2 × 1 hour sessions, 2 weeks apart (participant had initial therapy: 1‐hour session weekly for 1 year prior to this study)

Imitation accuracy of CVCV treated words either (a) with IPC or (b) without IPC

Imitation of CVCV was 0% to 22% accuracy and imitation with IPC was 96% to 100% accuracy

Pre‐ and post‐ treatment

Lack of experimental control, multiple baselines or control data. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No statistical analysis. Limited outcome measures. No statistical analysis. No blinding of assessors. No follow‐up or generalisation data. No replication across participants

Yoss 1974

10 children (no information on gender reported) aged 6 to 11 years with moderate to severe DAS

Not quasi‐/RCT (Case descriptions/file audit)

School‐based intervention

Motor

25 to 307 hours of therapy

Articulation, polysyllable words and connected speech in speech samples. Intelligibility rated on a 9‐point scale

Significant improvement on articulation. Minimal generalisation to polysyllable words and connected speech. Intelligibility improved by at least 0.5 points

Pre‐ and post‐ treatment

Lack of experimental control, multiple baselines or control data. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No statistical analysis.
No blinding of assessors. No follow‐up data

Zaretsky 2010

1 female aged 11.6 years with CAS, intellectual disability and language disorder

Not quasi‐/RCT (Single case design)

Phonological awareness (phoneme‒grapheme mapping, reading comprehension, 'Basics' programme). Speech ‐ PROMPT and Moving Across Syllables

Linguistic

Between 6.0 and 11.6 ongoing weekly treatments ‐ 1 hour × 1:1 sessions and PROMPT institute over summer

Per cent accuracy on phonological awareness and decoding

Improvement seen in phoneme‒grapheme mapping, segmentation and short vowel identification. Some improvement in decoding

Ongoing 1 × per week sessions from 6.0 to 11.6 years

Lack of experimental control, multiple baselines or control data. CAS diagnosis unclear and not replicable. No statistical analysis. Limited outcome measures.
No blinding of assessors. No follow‐up or generalisation data. No replication across participants. Difficult to replicate measures and treatment used

Participants: All participants are English speakers unless otherwise reported.

AOS: apraxia of speech; BBTOP: Bankson‐Bernthal Test of Phonology; CAS: childhood apraxia of speech; CSIP: consonant substitute inconsistency percentage; DAS: developmental apraxia of speech; DEAP: Diagnostic Evaluation of Articulation and Phonology; DVD: developmental verbal dyspraxia; GDD: global developmental delay; GFTA‐2: Goldman Fristoe Test of Articulation 2; HCAPP: Hodson Computerized Analysis of Phonological Patterns; ISP: inconsistency severity percentage; KLPA‐2: Khan‐Lewis Phonological Analysis, Second Edition; NARA: Neale Analysis of Reading Ability; PCC: percentage consonants correct; PDD‐NOS: pervasive developmental disorder ‐ not otherwise specified; PMLU: phonological mean length of utterance; PVC: percentage vowels correct; PWC: percentage words correct; PWP: proportion of whole‐word proximity; PIPA: Preschool and Primary Inventory of Phonological Awareness; RCT: randomised control trial; SSD: speech sound disorder; TOCS+: Test of Children's Speech Plus; TOPA: Test of Phonological Awareness; VMPAC: Verbal Motor Production Assessment for Children

Figuras y tablas -
Table 1. Excluded, low‐quality evidence from observational studies (case‐series, case control)