# Cognitive Development in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder and the Moderating Role of Intervention and ASD Persistence

**Authors:** Maya J. Golden, Lianna R. Lipton, Georgios Sideridis, Stephanie J. Brewster, William Barbaresi, Elizabeth Harstad

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/bs15111445 · 2025-10-23

## TL;DR

This study shows that early cognitive scores in children with autism predict later IQ, with non-persistent autism cases showing greater cognitive improvement.

## Contribution

The study identifies how ASD persistence and interventions influence cognitive development trajectories in children with autism.

## Key findings

- Baseline cognitive scores in toddlerhood moderately predict school-age IQ in children with ASD.
- Non-persistent ASD is linked to greater cognitive improvement from toddler to school age.
- Interventions had no positive effect on cognitive change for children with persistent ASD.

## Abstract

This study examined whether Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development-III (Bayley-III) standardized cognitive scores from toddlers diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) predict intellectual quotient (IQ) at early school age and whether ASD persistence or interventions received moderate this relationship. Children diagnosed clinically with ASD at 12–36 months underwent research assessments at 5–7 years. Of 212 children diagnosed as toddlers, 133 continued to meet DSM-5 ASD criteria based on current functioning at school age (“persistent ASD”), and 79 did not (“non-persistent ASD”). A moderate positive correlation was found between baseline cognitive scores in toddlerhood and school age IQ (r (210) = 0.45, p < 0.001). Children with baseline cognitive scores < 70 showed greater variation in school age IQ compared to those with baseline scores > 85. Non-persistent ASD status was associated with a higher rate of cognitive change from toddler to school age (Sdiff = 15.044; z = 4.432, p < 0.001). Overall, 94.3% of the sample received ASD-specific interventions. There was no relation between hours of ASD-specific interventions and change in cognitive trajectories for children with non-persistent ASD and an inverse relationship for children with persistent ASD.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** autism spectrum disorder (MONDO:0005258), ASD (MONDO:0006664)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** ASD (MESH:D000067877), Cognitive Development (MESH:D003072)

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12649235/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12649235