Published: 6:11PM Wednesday February 10, 2010
Source: Reuters
Source: ONE News
Being an older mother significantly increases the risk of having
a child with autism, but being an older father only increases the
risk when the mother is under the age of 30, US researchers
said.
They found that a 40-year-old woman's risk of having a child later
diagnosed with autism was 50% greater than that of a woman between
25 and 29.
But being an older father - 40 or older - only contributes
significantly to autism risk when the mother is under 30.
"The older the mother, the more the risk that the child will
develop autism, regardless of whether the father is young or old,"
said Irva Hertz-Picciotto of the University of California Davis
MIND Institute, who worked on the study published in the journal
Autism Research.
The findings contradict a 2006 study of children born in Israel
that suggested paternal age played a much larger role.
"There has been a debate over whether it is maternal or paternal
risk. A lot of people were thinking it's not really mom's age,"
Hertz-Picciotto said in a telephone interview.
Researchers and policymakers are increasingly looking for causes to
explain the growing numbers of children diagnosed with autism,
which affects one percent of US children.
There is no cure for autism, a spectrum of diseases ranging from
severe and profound inability to communicate and mental retardation
to relatively mild symptoms such as with Asperger's syndrome.
The current study, which incorporates data on 4.9 million births
and 12,159 autism cases in California, helps to clarify the
contribution of age from both parents.
"We have such a very large database we were really able to
disentangle the mother's age very well," Hertz-Picciotto said.
This can be a challenge because older mothers and fathers tend
to have children together.
"We found it does vary for the father, but not for the mother," she
said.
For example, among babies born to mothers under 25, children whose
father was over 40 were twice as likely to develop autism as those
whose father was between 25 and 29.
This could be because when both parents are older, the risk
conferred by the father is outweighed by the risk from the mother,
Hertz-Picciotto said.
Older parents
She said the point of the study is not to blame parents, but to
gain clues about what is going on in older parents that could
increase a child's risk of developing autism.
Older parents, for example, are more likely to have infertility
problems and have used fertility treatments; the mothers are more
likely to have autoimmune conditions, including gestational
diabetes; and both have accumulated more toxins over their
lifetimes, so the sperm and egg are more likely to have some
changes that could increase risk.
"We see these age findings as clues for where to look next,"
Hertz-Picciotto said.
Autism researchers are looking at a broad range of potential
environmental factors, including household products, medical
treatments, diet, food supplements and infections.
And the National Institute of Mental Health, one of the National
Institutes of Health, is looking at potential genetic causes of
autism and has plans to sequence the entire genomes of hundreds of
children and their parents to gain a better understanding of the
role genes play.
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