No link exists between maternal flu and increased child autism risk, says study

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A study has found no association between a mother catching the flu during pregnancy and their child having an increased risk of autism spectrum disorder (ASD).

Preganant women tissue

As reported in JAMA Pediatrics, the study tracked 196,929 children born between 2000 and 2010, at a gestational age of 24 weeks or more. It included 1,400 mothers (0.7%) who had been diagnosed with influenza infection and 45,231 mothers (23%) who had received a vaccination against influenza at some point during their pregnancy. Of all the children born, 3,101 (1.6%) were diagnosed with an ASD.

Lead author Ousseny Zerbo from Kaiser Permanente Northern California and colleagues found no overall link between influenza infection or vaccination at any point during pregnancy and an increased ASD risk in children.

Trimester-specific analysis did suggest an increased risk of ASD among mothers who were vaccinated during the first trimester, but the authors say this could have been due to chance because the finding was statistically insignificant after adjusting for multiple comparisons.

We found no association between ASD risk and influenza infection during pregnancy or influenza vaccination during the second to third trimester of pregnancy,”

Lead author Ousseny Zerbo from Kaiser Permanente Northern California and colleagues.

“However, there was a suggestion of increased ASD risk among children whose mothers received influenza vaccinations early in pregnancy, although the association was insignificant after statistical correction for multiple comparisons.”

The authors say their study cannot establish causality and had a number of limitations, including ASD status being established by diagnoses on medical records and not having been validated by standardized clinical assessment in all cases. Furthermore, other potential unmeasured mitigating factors could not be controlled for.

“While we do not advocate changes in vaccine policy or practice, we believe that additional studies are warranted to further evaluate any potential associations between first-trimester maternal influenza vaccination and autism," concludes the team.

Sally Robertson

Written by

Sally Robertson

Sally first developed an interest in medical communications when she took on the role of Journal Development Editor for BioMed Central (BMC), after having graduated with a degree in biomedical science from Greenwich University.

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Comments

  1. John Paterson John Paterson Australia says:

    Good to see it only took 10 years to figure out the autism epidemic isn't caused by maternal flu. The pace of autism research is staggering! It should only take a few millenia to figure it out at this rate.

    The CDC still says the autism rate is 1 in 68. This study shows a rate of 1.6%. That's 1 in 62. But given how long this study went for, even this figure is old. Other more short-term studies show a rate of around 1 in 50. Even if the rate stays at around 1 in 50 there will eventually be 1/50th of the population or 6.5 million cases of autism in the US alone. Given that the lifetime cost of supporting someone with autism is several million dollars, the cost of autism is literally trillions of dollars. But how much is spent on research to prevent/cure autism?

    Of course the rate IS increasing though. CDC says 1 in 68 a couple of years ago. This study says 1 in 62. Other recent shorter-term studies say as high as 1 in 50. At the rate it's increasing, it won't be long until the economy is not able to support all the autistics. What then?

    At what point do we start panicking?

    It's like the boiling frog experiment. Imagine if autism was NEW! Imagine if suddenly 1 in 50 kids had a new condition that caused them to stop speaking and run around on tip-toes flapping their hands etc etc. Imagine the panic then!

    But no. We have have a mad panic to desperately find a solution to things like the Zika virus. Why?

    "The number of babies with Zika-linked birth defects born in the continental United States is at 25"

    Gosh.

The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News Medical.
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