Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, 660 S. Euclid Ave; Box 8504, St. Louis, MO, 63110, USA.
Department of Genetics, Washington University School of Medicine, 660 S. Euclid Ave; Box 8108, St. Louis, MO, 63110, USA.
J Neurodev Disord. 2021 Sep 16;13(1):39. doi: 10.1186/s11689-021-09389-8.
Although autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are among the most heritable of all neuropsychiatric syndromes, most affected children are born to unaffected parents. Recently, we reported an average increase of 3-5% over general population risk of ASD among offspring of adults who have first-degree relatives with ASD in a large epidemiologic family sample. A next essential step is to investigate whether there are measurable characteristics of individual parents placing them at higher or lower recurrence risk, as this information could allow more personalized genetic counseling.
We assembled what is to our knowledge the largest collection of data on the ability of four measurable characteristics of unaffected prospective parents to specify risk for autism among their offspring: (1) sub clinical autistic trait burden, (2) parental history of a sibling with ASD, (3) transmitted autosomal molecular genetic abnormalities, and (4) parental age. Leveraging phenotypic and genetic data in curated family cohorts, we evaluate the respective associations between these factors and child outcome when autism is present in the family in the parental generation.
All four characteristics were associated with elevation in offspring risk; however, the magnitude of their predictive power-with the exception of isolated rare inherited pathogenic variants -does not yet reach a threshold that would typically be considered actionable for reproductive decision-making.
Individual specification of risk to offspring of adults in ASD-affected families is not straightforwardly improved by ascertainment of parental phenotype, and it is not yet clear whether genomic screening of prospective parents in families affected by idiopathic ASD is warranted as a clinical standard. Systematic screening of affected family members for heritable pathogenic variants, including rare sex-linked mutations, will identify a subset of families with substantially elevated transmission risk. Polygenic risk scores are only weakly predictive at this time but steadily improving and ultimately may enable more robust prediction either singly or when combined with the risk variables examined in this study.
自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)是所有神经精神综合征中遗传性最强的疾病之一,但大多数受影响的儿童的父母并未患病。最近,我们在一个大型流行病学家族样本中报告,在一级亲属患有 ASD 的成年人的后代中,ASD 的总体人群风险平均增加了 3-5%。下一步至关重要的是要调查是否存在可衡量的父母个体特征,这些特征会使他们处于更高或更低的复发风险,因为这些信息可以提供更个性化的遗传咨询。
我们收集了迄今为止关于四个可衡量的未受影响的准父母特征在其后代中指定自闭症风险的能力的最大数据集:(1)亚临床自闭症特征负担,(2)父母一级亲属中有 ASD 病史,(3)遗传的常染色体分子遗传异常,以及(4)父母年龄。利用表型和遗传数据在经过策展的家族队列中,我们评估了这些因素与父母代中家族存在自闭症时儿童结局之间的各自关联。
所有四个特征都与后代风险升高相关;然而,除了孤立的罕见遗传致病性变异外,它们的预测能力的大小尚未达到通常被认为对生殖决策具有可操作性的阈值。
通过确定父母的表型,对 ASD 受影响家庭中的成年子女进行个体风险指定并不简单,目前尚不清楚是否有必要对受特发性 ASD 影响的家庭的准父母进行基因组筛查作为临床标准。对受影响的家庭成员进行遗传致病性变异的系统筛查,包括罕见的性连锁突变,将确定具有显著高传播风险的亚组家庭。多基因风险评分目前预测能力较弱,但在不断提高,最终可能会通过单独使用或与本研究中检查的风险变量结合使用,实现更稳健的预测。