Anzeige
Advanced maternal age is linked to a significantly elevated risk of having a child with autism, regardless of the father's age, according to an exhaustive study of all births in California during the 1990s by UC Davis Health System researchers. Advanced paternal age is associated with elevated autism risk only when the father is older and the mother is under 30, the study found.
Published online today in the February issue of the journal Autism Research, the study, "Independent and Dependent Contributions of Advanced Maternal and Paternal Ages to Autism Risk," is one of the largest population-based studies to quantify how each parent's age — separately and together — affects the risk of having a child with autism.
The study found that the incremental risk of having a child with autism increased by 18 percent — nearly one fifth — for every five-year increase in the mother's age. A 40-year-old woman's risk of having a child later diagnosed with autism was 50 percent greater than that of a woman between 25 and 29 years old.
Advanced parental age is a known risk factor for having a child with autism. However, previous research has shown contradictory results regarding whether it is the mother, the father or both who contribute most to the increased risk of autism. For example, one study reported that fathers over 40 were six times more likely than fathers under 30 to have a child with autism.
"This study challenges a current theory in autism epidemiology that identifies the father's age as a key factor in increasing the risk of having a child with autism," said Janie Shelton, the study's lead author and a doctoral student in the UC Davis Department of Public Health Sciences. "It shows that while maternal age consistently increases the risk of autism, the father's age only contributes an increased risk when the father is older and the mother is under 30 years old. Among mothers over 30, increases in the father's age do not appear to further increase the risk of autism."
Autism is a pervasive developmental disorder of deficits in social skills and communication, as well as repetitive and restricted behaviors, with onset occurring prior to age 3. Abnormal brain development, probably beginning in the womb, is known to be fundamental to the behaviors that characterize autism. Current estimates place the incidence of autism at between 1 in 100 and 1 in 110 children in the United States.
During the 1990s, the number of California women over 40 giving birth increased by more than 300 percent. But only about 5 percent of the 600-percent increase in the number of autism cases in the state can be attributed to women waiting longer to have children, the study suggests.
To conduct their investigation, the researchers obtained the electronic records for all births in California between Jan. 1, 1990 and Dec. 31, 1999. The records incorporated detailed demographic information, including the ages of both parents. To identify which children would develop autism, the researchers obtained electronic records identifying children born during the study period who later received an autism diagnosis from state Department of Developmental Services. In this study autism was defined as a diagnosis of full-syndrome autism at a California Regional Center.
The researchers also excluded a small number of births where demographic information about parents, such as their ages and levels of education, was not available. Instances of multiple births were analyzed separately. The exclusions brought the total size of the study sample to approximately 4.9 million births and 12,159 cases of autism.
For older mothers, the step-wise progression in the risk of having a child who later would be diagnosed with autism was apparent among every age group of fathers. When the father was older and the mother was younger — under 30 — the child's risk for developing autism also was elevated. For example, among births to mothers under 25, children fathered by a man over 40 were twice as likely to develop autism as those whose father was between 25 and 29. Among mothers over 30, the increased risk associated with older fathers dissipated, the study found.
Because of the large study size, the researchers were able to show how risk for autism was affected by each parent's age by holding one parent's age constant and then comparing autism incidence across the age of the other parent across five-year increments. The subtle interaction of how each parent's age affects the risk of autism then became quantifiable even when it was reliant on the other parent's age. This methodology is more efficacious and requires fewer assumptions than the mathematical modeling used by earlier studies, the researchers said.
The researchers note that understanding the relationship between increased parental age and autism risk is critical to understanding its biological causes. Earlier studies have observed that advanced maternal age is a risk factor for a variety of other birth-related conditions, including infertility, early fetal loss, low birth-weight, chromosomal aberrations and congenital anomalies.
Irva Hertz-Picciotto, professor of public health sciences, a researcher at the UC Davis MIND Institute and the study's senior author, said the reason that having an older parent places a child at risk for autism is not known.
"We still need to figure out what it is about older parents that puts their children at greater risk for autism and other adverse outcomes, so that we can begin to design interventions," Hertz-Picciotto said.
One possible clue comes from a 2008 UC Davis study that found some mothers of children with autism had antibodies to fetal brain protein, while none of the mothers of typical children did. Advancing age has been associated with an increase in autoantibody production. Further work investigating advancing age in such findings may be useful, the study authors said. They added that some persistent environmental chemicals accumulate in the body and also may have a role to play in autism, possibly contributing to the apparent effect of parental age.
The study also suggests that epigenetic changes over time "may enable an older parent to transfer a multitude of molecular functional alterations to a child ... thus epigenetics may be involved in the risks contributed by advancing parental age as a result of changes induced by stresses from environmental chemicals, co-morbidity or assistive reproductive therapy."
Daniel Tancredi, an assistant professor in the Department of Pediatrics at UC Davis Health System, also contributed to this study. It was funded by a grant from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences; a United States Environmental Protection Agency Science to Achieve Results (STAR) grant; the UC Davis School of Medicine and Office of Graduate Studies.
UC Davis Health System is an integrated, academic health system encompassing UC Davis School of Medicine, the 613-bed acute-care hospital and clinical services of UC Davis Medical Center, the 800-member physician group known as UC Davis Medical Group, and the Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing.
Phyllis Brown | Quelle: EurekAlert!
Weitere Informationen: www.ucdavis.edu
Weitere Berichte zu: Advanced Investigator Grant > autism risk > demographic information > environmental risk > Health Sciences > health services > Hertz-Picciotto > Medical Wellness > risk factor > Science TV
Wandel der Hochschulbildung in Deutschland und Professionalisierung
09.02.2012 | Institut für Hochschulforschung (HoF) an der Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg
Internet-Therapie hilft bei quälendem Tinnitus
09.02.2012 | Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
Erstmals gezeigt, dass Atomkerne transparent werden
Einem Team von DESY-Wissenschaftlern um Dr. Ralf Röhlsberger gelang es an der hochbrillanten Synchrotronlichtquelle PETRA III, Atomkerne mit Hilfe von Röntgenlicht transparent zu machen. Sie entdeckten dabei gleichzeitig ein neues Prinzip, um einen optisch gesteuerten Schalter für Licht herzustellen, also Licht mit Licht zu beeinflussen, ein wichtiger Baustein auf dem ...
Wissenschaftler beobachten, wie Oxytocin zentrale Schaltstellen im Gehirn erreicht und das Verhalten beeinflusst
Kuschelhormon, Treuehormon, Angstlöser – häufig gebrauchte Schlagwörter für das Neuropeptid Oxytocin, das sich in den letzten Jahren als ein Stoff erwiesen hat, der unser Verhalten in zentralen Regionen des Gehirns positiv beeinflussen kann. Was jedoch bisher völlig unklar war: Wie gelangt dieser Botenstoff aus dem Hypothalamus in die Hirnbereiche, die ...
Ein neuartiger Biopolymer-Film aus Lachs-DNA mit Silber-Nanopartikeln speichert Informationen kostengünstig und umweltverträglich.
Entstanden ist das organische System in fächer- und länderübergreifender Zusammenarbeit von Wissenschaftlern des DFG-Centers for Functional Nanostructures (CFN) am KIT und des Institute of Photonics Technologies an der National Tsing Hua University in Taiwan. Der DNA-Datenspeicher eignet sich unter anderem für biotechnische Anwendungen, etwa als Bauteil in Biosensoren.
Das System ...
Bildveröffentlichung der Europäischen Südsternwarte (Garching) - Mit dem Very Large Telescope (VLT) der ESO haben das bislang detailreichste Infrarotbild der Sternkinderstube des Carinanebels aufgenommen. Es zeigt vor dem spektakulären Hintergrund einer himmlischen Landschaft auf Gas, Staub und jungen Sterne zahlreiche nie gesehene Details und zählt zu den atemberaubendsten VLT-Bildern überhaupt.
Im Herzen der südlichen Milchstraße, im Sternbild Carina (Der Schiffskiel, [1]), befindet sich in einer Entfernung von etwa 7500 Lichtjahren die Sternkinderstube des Carinanebels. Diese ausgedehnte Wolke aus leuchtendem Gas und Staub ist von der Erde aus gesehen eine der nächstgelegenen Geburtsstätten massereicher Sterne.
Der Nebel beinhaltet einige der hellsten und ...
Auf der embedded world identifizieren Wissenschaftler der Fraunhofer ESK Lücken im Funkspektrum, um diese für zusätzliche Übertragungen zu nutzen.
Der in Halle 5, Stand 5-228, vorgestellte Prototyp zeigt das Funkspektrum in einem 3D-Spektrogramm, markiert die prognostizierten Lücken und prüft deren Eintreffen. Diese Methode, Cognitive Radio, verbessert die Übertragungsqualität in einem bereits vollen Funkspektrum ohne aufwändiges, statisches Koexistenzmanagement. Ziel ist eine höhere Verfügbarkeit und Zuverlässigkeit von Funk für die Automatisierung.
...
Anzeige
Anzeige

Kaltwasserkorallen als Anpassungskünstler?
09.02.2012 | Ökologie Umwelt- Naturschutz
Wandel der Hochschulbildung in Deutschland und Professionalisierung
09.02.2012 | Studien Analysen
Ocean warming causes elephant seals to dive deeper
09.02.2012 | Biowissenschaften Chemie
7. Mannheimer Arbeitsrechtstag am 14. März mit Experten aus Theorie und Praxis
09.02.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten
International Forum on Terahertz Spectroscopy and Imaging
09.02.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten
Teams aus neun Ländern treffen sich an der Leibniz Universität zum 6th Hanover PreMoot
09.02.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten