Published April 30, 2024 | Version 6.2
Preprint Open

We've all been wrong about Provisional Tic Disorder

  • 1. Washington University in St. Louis
  • 2. University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry
  • 3. Kennedy Krieger Institute and Johns Hopkins Medicine
  • 4. University of California San Diego

Description

Background: Provisional Tic Disorder (PTD) is common in childhood. The received wisdom among clinicians is that PTD is short-lived and mild, with at most a few tics, and rarely includes complex tics, premonitory phenomena or comorbid illnesses. However, such conclusions come from clinical experience, with biased ascertainment and limited follow-up.

Methods: Prospective study of 89 children with tics starting 0-9 months ago (median 4 months), fewer than half from clinical sources. Follow-up at 12 (± 24, 36, 48) months after the first tic.

Results: At study entry, many children had ADHD (39), an anxiety disorder (27), OCD (9) or enuresis (17). All had at least two current tics, with a mean total since onset of 6.9 motor and 2.0 phonic tics. Forty-one had experienced a complex tic, and 69 could suppress some tics. Tics were clinically meaningful: 64 had tics severe enough for a clinical trial, and 76 families sought medical attention for the tics.

At 12 months, 79 returned, and 78 still had tics. Of these, 29 manifested no tics during history and extended examination, but only via audio-visual monitoring when the child was seated alone. Only 12/70 now had plans to see a doctor for tics. Most who returned at 2-4 years still had tics known to the child and family, but medical impact was low.

Conclusions: Our results do not contradict previous data, but overturn clinical lore. The data strongly argue against the longstanding but arbitrary tradition of separating tic disorders into recent-onset versus chronic.

Other (English)

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Additional details

Related works

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Journal article: 10.1016/j.comppsych.2024.152510 (DOI)

Funding

National Institute of Mental Health
Training Investigators in Neuroimaging and Neuropsychiatry of Movement Disorders K24MH087913
National Institute of Mental Health
PREDICTING OUTCOME IN CHILDREN WITH TIC DISORDERS USING NEUROIMAGING DATA K01MH104592
National Institute of Mental Health
The New Tics Study: A Novel Approach to Pathophysiology and Cause of Tic Disorders R01MH104030
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
PREDICTING OUTCOME IN CHILDREN WITH NEW-ONSET TICS USING NEUROIMAGING DATA R21NS091635
National Institutes of Health
WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY INSTITUTE OF CLINICAL AND TRANSLATIONAL SCIENCES UL1RR024992
National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences
Washington University Institute of Clinical and Translational Sciences UL1TR000448
National Cancer Institute
Cancer Center Support Grant P30CA091842
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY INTELLECTUAL AND DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES RESEARCH CENTER U54HD087011
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders
Unilateral Hearing Loss in Children K23DC006638

Dates

Accepted
2024-06-20
v. 6.2