The Delaware Gazette

Autism research may be about to bear fruit

Irva Hertz-Picciotto, a researcher at the Uni­ver­sity of Cal­i­for­nia, Davis, is lead­ing a study into what sparks autism dis­or­ders. More than $1 bil­lion has been spent over the past decade search­ing for autism’s causes. (Cour­tesy | UC Davis Health System)

MIKE STOBBE

AP Med­ical Writer

ATLANTA — More than $1 bil­lion has been spent over the past decade research­ing autism. In some ways, the search for its causes looks like a long-running fish­ing expe­di­tion, with a focus on every­thing from genet­ics to the age of the father, the weight of the mother, and how close a child lives to a freeway.

That per­cep­tion may soon change. Some in the field say they are see­ing the begin­ning of a wave of sci­en­tific reports that should strengthen some the­o­ries, jet­ti­son oth­ers and per­haps even her­ald new drugs.

“I do think over the next three to five years we’ll be able to paint a much clearer pic­ture of how genes and envi­ron­men­tal fac­tors com­bine” to cause autism, said Geral­dine Daw­son, a psy­chol­o­gist who is chief sci­ence offi­cer for the advo­cacy group Autism Speaks.

The effort has been infused with new urgency by a recent fed­eral report that found autism dis­or­ders are far more com­mon than was pre­vi­ously under­stood, affect­ing 1 in 88 U.S. chil­dren. Bet­ter diag­no­sis is largely respon­si­ble for the new esti­mate, but health offi­cials said there may actu­ally be more cases of autism, too.

If autism’s causes remain a mys­tery, “you’re not going to be able to stop this increase,” said Irva Hertz-Picciotto, a researcher at the Uni­ver­sity of Cal­i­for­nia, Davis who is lead­ing a closely watched study into what sparks autism disorders.

In the past week, a spate of stud­ies released dur­ing National Autism Aware­ness Month has offered tan­ta­liz­ing new infor­ma­tion about poten­tial causes. Research pub­lished in the jour­nal Nature widened the under­stand­ing of the genetic roots of some cases and con­firmed the ele­vated risks for chil­dren with older fathers. Another study, released online Mon­day in Pedi­atrics, sug­gested mater­nal obe­sity may play a role.

To be sure, find­ing the causes of autism — an umbrella term for a vari­ety of dis­or­ders that delay chil­dren socially or intel­lec­tu­ally — remains daunt­ing. The causes are believed to be com­pli­cated, and not nec­es­sar­ily the same for each child. Some liken autism to can­cer — a small word for a wide range of ill­nesses. In many cases, autism can be blamed on both genetic prob­lems that load the gun and other fac­tors that pull the trigger.

It has been a grow­ing pub­lic con­cern for two decades, as stud­ies have found it to be more and more preva­lent. The U.S. gov­ern­ment dra­mat­i­cally increased fund­ing for autism research in the last decade, and now bud­gets about $170 mil­lion a year through the National Insti­tutes of Health. That’s only about a quar­ter of what NIH will spend on breast can­cer research and $50 mil­lion less than what it will spend on asthma.

But more than a half-dozen foun­da­tions and autism advo­cacy groups have been adding to the pot, putting annual research spend­ing in recent years at more than $300 mil­lion. About a third of that has been devoted to find­ing autism’s causes.

The lion’s share of money for find­ing a cause has been spent on genet­ics, which so far experts believe can account for roughly 20 per­cent of cases. The ear­li­est suc­cess was in the early 1990s and involved the dis­cov­ery of the genetic under­pin­nings of Frag­ile X syn­drome, a rare con­di­tion that accounts for just 2 to 4 per­cent of autism cases but is the most com­mon form of inher­ited intel­lec­tual dis­abil­ity in boys.

The focus on genet­ics has been bol­stered by dra­matic improve­ments in gene map­ping as well as the bio­engi­neer­ing of mice with autism symp­toms. Dozens of risk genes have been iden­ti­fied, and a half-dozen drug com­pa­nies are said to be work­ing on devel­op­ing new treatments.

“We’ve made some very sig­nif­i­cant progress on the genet­ics end of this search,” said Dr. Thomas Insel, direc­tor of the National Insti­tute of Men­tal Health.

Sci­en­tists have used autis­tic mice to test new drugs. Among the most promis­ing is a small, white, strawberry-flavored pill that is so exper­i­men­tal it doesn’t have a name. Devel­oped by a Mass­a­chu­setts com­pany called Sea­side Ther­a­peu­tics Inc., the drug is aimed at a prob­lem area in the brains of autis­tic chil­dren, where neu­rons con­nect and con­duct sig­nals through the ner­vous system.

It’s a bit like the way tree-hopping ants might cross the twig ends of one tree branch to another. In Frag­ile X syn­drome, sci­en­tists have noted the branches are thin­ner and the twigs too numer­ous. The exper­i­men­tal drug thins the twigs and strength­ens the branches, allow­ing a more solid and cen­tral­ized bridge.

The same prob­lem hasn’t been as vis­i­ble in other types of autism, but many believe the phe­nom­e­non is some­what similar.

The drug was deemed suc­cess­ful in mice and is now being tested in chil­dren and adults. In small, early stud­ies, the drug made a strik­ing dif­fer­ence in small groups of Frag­ile X chil­dren, caus­ing hermit-like young­sters to start hang­ing out in the kitchen to chat with their moth­ers, said Dr. Paul Wang, Seaside’s vice pres­i­dent of clin­i­cal development.

Now it is being tried in a pre­lim­i­nary study of about 150 chil­dren with a range of other autism dis­or­ders, includ­ing Asperger’s. The results are expected to be pre­sented at a sci­en­tific con­fer­ence in the next year.

“It’s going to be an excit­ing time, we hope,” when those results come in, said Daw­son, from Autism Speaks.

But even genet­ics enthu­si­asts acknowl­edge that genes are only part of the answer. Stud­ies of iden­ti­cal twins have shown that autism can occur in one and not the other, mean­ing some­thing out­side a child’s DNA is trig­ger­ing the dis­or­der in many cases. Some cases may be entirely due to other causes, Daw­son said.

That broad “other” cat­e­gory means “envi­ron­men­tal” influ­ences — not nec­es­sar­ily chem­i­cals, but a grab bag of out­side fac­tors that include things like the age of the father at con­cep­tion and ill­nesses and med­ica­tions the mother had while pregnant.

For years, the best-known envi­ron­men­tal the­ory involved child­hood vac­cines, prompted by a flawed 1998 British study that has been thor­oughly dis­cred­ited. Dozens of later stud­ies have found no link between vac­cines and autism.

But there are other pos­si­ble can­di­dates. In all cases, these are “asso­ci­a­tion” stud­ies — they don’t prove cause and effect. They merely find con­nec­tions between cer­tain fac­tors and autism. And some­times these con­clu­sions can be skewed by other things researchers failed to account for. Some study results expected within a year:

  • Hertz-Picciotto’s study of 1,600 chil­dren in North­ern Cal­i­for­nia is com­par­ing autis­tic chil­dren, young­sters with other devel­op­men­tal dis­abil­i­ties, and those who have no such diag­noses. Some results have been released already, includ­ing the recent find­ing that sug­gests a link between autism and a mother’s obe­sity. An ear­lier part of the study found that chil­dren born to moth­ers liv­ing less than two blocks from a free­way were twice as likely to have autism — pre­sum­ably because of auto exhaust and air pol­lu­tion, the researchers speculated.
  • A Cen­ters for Dis­ease Con­trol and Pre­ven­tion study involves 2,700 fam­i­lies nation­wide. The researchers are inter­view­ing par­ents and por­ing over med­ical records to look for com­mon threads among autis­tic fam­i­lies, as well as doing genet­ics tests and check­ing hair sam­ples for mer­cury. Much of the focus is on ill­nesses, med­ica­tions, nutri­tional defi­cien­cies or other prob­lems dur­ing pregnancy.
  • A study by Penn­syl­va­nia researchers involves 1,700 fam­i­lies in var­i­ous regions of the coun­try. Sci­en­tists are doing brain-imaging to look for changes over time in the brains of infants who have an older autis­tic sibling.
  • A large Scan­di­na­vian study is exam­in­ing patient reg­istries in six coun­tries for pre­na­tal risk factors.

As study find­ings are reported, researchers are hop­ing to see rep­e­ti­tion — con­fir­ma­tion, that is — that cer­tain fac­tors are play­ing sig­nif­i­cant roles.

Even so, sci­en­tists are still cast­ing nets.

Said Coleen Boyle, a CDC offi­cial over­see­ing research into children’s devel­op­men­tal dis­abil­i­ties: “We’re at the infancy of just under­stand­ing how these fac­tors relate to autism.”

AP News Posted by on Apr 9 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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