this is a big shift away from the genetic theory of autism's etiology.

The New York Times / July 4, 2011
New Study Implicates Environmental Factors in Autism
By LAURIE TARKAN

A new study of twins suggests that environmental factors, including
conditions in the womb, may be at least as important as genes in
causing autism.

The researchers did not say which environmental influences might be at
work. But other experts said the new study, released online on Monday,
marked an important shift in thinking about the causes of autism,
which is now thought to affect at least 1 percent of the population in
the developed world.

“This is a very significant study because it confirms that genetic
factors are involved in the cause of the disorder,” said Dr. Peter
Szatmari, a leading autism researcher who is the head of child
psychiatry and behavioral neuroscience at McMaster University in
Ontario. “But it shifts the focus to the possibility that
environmental factors could also be really important.”

As recently as a few decades ago, psychiatrists thought autism was
caused by a lack of maternal warmth. And while that notion has been
discarded in favor of genetic explanations, there has been growing
acceptance that genes do not tell the whole story, in part because
autism rates appear to have increased far faster than our genes can
evolve.

“I think we now understand that both genetic and environmental factors
have to be taken seriously,” said Dr. Joachim Hallmayer, an associate
professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford and the
lead author of the new study, which is to be published in the November
issue of Archives of General Psychiatry.

Other experts have cited factors like parental age, multiple
pregnancies, low birth weight and exposure to medications or maternal
infection during pregnancy.

In the new study, the largest of its kind among twins, researchers
looked at 192 pairs of identical and fraternal twins whose cases were
drawn from California databases. At least one twin in each pair had
the classic form of autism, which is marked by extreme social
withdrawal, communication problems and repetitive behaviors. In many
cases, the other twin also had classic autism or a milder “autism
spectrum” disorder like Asperger’s syndrome.

Identical twins share 100 percent of their genes; fraternal twins
share 50 percent of their genes. So comparing autism rates in both
types of twins can enable researchers to measure the importance of
genes versus shared environment.

The study found that autism or autism spectrum disorders occurred in
both children in 77 percent of the male identical twins and in 50
percent of the female identical twins. As expected, the rates among
fraternal twins were lower: 31 percent of males and 36 percent of
females.

But surprisingly, mathematical modeling suggested that only 38 percent
of the cases could be attributed to genetic factors, compared with the
90 percent suggested by previous studies.

And more surprising still, shared environmental factors appeared to be
at work in 58 percent of the cases.

“We, like everyone else, were very surprised because we didn’t expect
it to be that high,” said a senior author of the study, Neil Risch, a
geneticist and epidemiologist at the University of California, San
Francisco.

The rate of autism occurring in two siblings who are not twins is much
lower, suggesting that the conditions the twins shared in the womb,
rather than what they were exposed to after birth, contributed to the
development of autism.

A second article, also released early on the journal’s Web site, found
an elevated risk of autism in children whose mothers took a popular
type of antidepressant during the year before delivery. But the
authors reassured women taking these drugs — so-called S.S.R.I.’s like
Prozac, Zoloft, Celexa and Lexapro — that the risk was still quite
low: 2.1 percent in children whose mothers used them in the year
before delivery, and 2.3 percent in the first trimester of pregnancy.

Dr. Joseph Coyle, the editor in chief of the psychiatry journal,
called the two studies “game changers.”

Clara Lajonchere, an author of the twin study and vice president of
clinical programs for the research and advocacy organization Autism
Speaks, said that “much more emphasis is going to be put on looking at
prenatal and perinatal factors with respect to autism susceptibility.”

She added, “We need to not just study the environmental factors, but
the relation between the genes and the environment.”

“For pregnant women or those thinking about having a family,” she
said, “prenatal care is critical, and if a pregnant woman is taking
any kinds of medication, she should work closely with a physician.”
-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to