A.J. Drexel Autism Institute, Drexel University, Suite 560, 3020 Market St, Philadelphia, PA, 19104, USA.
Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente Northern California, Oakland, CA, USA.
Mol Autism. 2021 Mar 18;12(1):24. doi: 10.1186/s13229-021-00429-7.
The Early Markers for Autism (EMA) study is a population-based case-control study designed to learn more about early biologic processes involved in ASD.
Participants were drawn from Southern California births from 2000 to 2003 with archived prenatal and neonatal screening specimens. Across two phases, children with ASD (n = 629) and intellectual disability without ASD (ID, n = 230) were ascertained from the California Department of Developmental Services (DDS), with diagnoses confirmed according to DSM-IV-TR criteria based on expert clinical review of abstracted records. General population controls (GP, n = 599) were randomly sampled from birth certificate files and matched to ASD cases by sex, birth month and year after excluding individuals with DDS records. EMA has published over 20 papers examining immune markers, endogenous hormones, environmental chemicals, and genetic factors in association with ASD and ID. This review summarizes the results across these studies, as well as the EMA study design and future directions.
EMA enabled several key contributions to the literature, including the examination of biomarker levels in biospecimens prospectively collected during critical windows of neurodevelopment. Key findings from EMA include demonstration of elevated cytokine and chemokine levels in maternal mid-pregnancy serum samples in association with ASD, as well as aberrations in other immune marker levels; suggestions of increased odds of ASD with prenatal exposure to certain endocrine disrupting chemicals, though not in mixture analyses; and demonstration of maternal and fetal genetic influence on prenatal chemical, and maternal and neonatal immune marker and vitamin D levels. We also observed an overall lack of association with ASD and measured maternal and neonatal vitamin D, mercury, and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) levels.
Covariate and outcome data were limited to information in Vital Statistics and DDS records. As a study based in Southern California, generalizability for certain environmental exposures may be reduced.
Results across EMA studies support the importance of the prenatal and neonatal periods in ASD etiology, and provide evidence for the role of the maternal immune response during pregnancy. Future directions for EMA, and the field of ASD in general, include interrogation of mechanistic pathways and examination of combined effects of exposures.
自闭症早期标志物(EMA)研究是一项基于人群的病例对照研究,旨在深入了解自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)相关的早期生物学过程。
参与者来自 2000 年至 2003 年南加州出生的人群,其存档的产前和新生儿筛查标本可用于研究。在两个阶段中,通过加利福尼亚发育服务部(DDS)确定了患有 ASD(n=629)和无 ASD 的智力障碍(ID,n=230)的儿童,这些儿童的诊断是根据 DSM-IV-TR 标准,根据摘要记录的专家临床审查来确认的。普通人群对照(GP,n=599)是从出生证明文件中随机抽样的,并根据性别、出生月份和出生年份与 ASD 病例进行匹配,同时排除了 DDS 记录的个体。EMA 已经发表了 20 多篇论文,研究了免疫标志物、内源性激素、环境化学物质和遗传因素与 ASD 和 ID 的关联。本综述总结了这些研究以及 EMA 研究设计和未来方向的结果。
EMA 为文献做出了几项重要贡献,包括在神经发育的关键窗口期前瞻性地采集生物样本,以检测生物标志物水平。EMA 的主要发现包括:母体妊娠中期血清样本中细胞因子和趋化因子水平升高与 ASD 相关,以及其他免疫标志物水平异常;提示产前接触某些内分泌干扰化学物质会增加 ASD 的风险,但在混合物分析中没有发现;以及证明母体和胎儿遗传对产前化学物质、母体和新生儿免疫标志物和维生素 D 水平的影响。我们还观察到 ASD 与测量的母体和新生儿维生素 D、汞和脑源性神经营养因子(BDNF)水平之间总体缺乏关联。
协变量和结果数据仅限于生命统计和 DDS 记录中的信息。由于该研究是基于南加州进行的,因此某些环境暴露的普遍性可能会降低。
EMA 研究的结果支持了产前和新生儿期在 ASD 病因学中的重要性,并为妊娠期间母体免疫反应的作用提供了证据。EMA 和 ASD 领域的未来方向包括探究机制途径和检查暴露的综合影响。