Sunday, December 14, 2025
ADVT 
International

Trump's touting of an unproven autism drug surprised many, including the doctor who proposed it

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Sep, 2025 10:49 AM
  • Trump's touting of an unproven autism drug surprised many, including the doctor who proposed it

When President Donald Trump's administration announced it would repurpose an old, generic drug as a new treatment for autism, it came as a surprise to many experts — including the physician who suggested the idea to the nation’s top health officials.


Dr. Richard Frye told The Associated Press that he'd been talking with federal regulators about developing his own customized version of the drug for children with autism, assuming more research would be required.


“So we were kinda surprised that they were just approving it right out of the gate without more studies or anything,” said Frye, an Arizona-based child neurologist who has a book and online education business focused on the experimental treatment.


It’s another example of the haphazard rollout of the Trump administration’s Monday announcement on autism, which critics say has elevated an unproven drug that needs far more study before being approved as a credible treatment for the complex brain disease.


A spokesperson for the Republican administration did not immediately respond to a request for comment Wednesday morning.


The nation’s leading autism groups and researchers quickly distanced themselves from the decision on leucovorin, a derivative of vitamin B, calling the studies supporting its use “very weak" and ”very small."


“We have nothing resembling even moderate evidence that leucovorin is an effective treatment for autism symptoms,” said David Mandell, a psychiatrist at the University of Pennsylvania.


Mandell and other researchers say the evidence suggests autism is mostly rooted in genetics, with input from other factors, including the age of the child's father.


Nevertheless, a growing number of doctors are prescribing the medication, repurposing versions used for chemotherapy or ordering new formulations from compounding pharmacies.


Many researchers agree the drug warrants additional study, particularly for patients with a deficiency of folate, or vitamin B9, in the brain that may play a role in autism. But for now, they say, it should only be taken in carefully controlled clinical trials.


“We often say our job is to stay between the yellow lines," said Dr. Lawrence Gray, a pediatric developmental specialist at Northwestern University. “When people just decide to go outside of current guidelines, then they’re outside of that. And nobody knows what’s going to happen out there.”


The evidence for leucovorin isn't settled


The case for leucovorin’s use in autism begins with established science but quickly veers into uncertain terrain.


When metabolized, the drug turns into folate, which is essential for healthy prenatal development and is recommended before and during pregnancy. But far less is known about its role after birth.


The issue caught the attention of Frye and others more than 20 years ago, when research suggested some people with autism had low levels of folate in the brain due to antibodies blocking the vitamin's absorption.


The theory linking autism to folate levels was mostly abandoned, however, after research showed that the siblings of people with autism can also have low folates without any symptoms of the condition.
“I honestly thought this had died out as a theory for autism and was shocked to see its reemergence,” Mandell said.


In 2018, Frye and his colleagues published a study of 48 children in which those taking leucovorin performed better on several language measures than those taking a placebo.


Four small studies in other countries, including China and Iran, showed similar results, albeit using different doses, metrics and statistical analyses, which researchers say is problematic.


Frye struggled to get funding to continue within the traditional academic system.


“I decided to move out of academia to be more innovative and actually do some of this stuff,” he said. 
Researchers saw an opening to approach Trump’s top health officials


Earlier this year, Frye and several other researchers formed a new entity, the Autism Discovery Coalition, to pitch their work to Trump administration officials including Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.


“After Kennedy got in, we thought they’d hopefully be friendly to autism scientists,” he said.


An August meeting with National Institutes of Health Director Jay Bhattacharya quickly led to further discussions with the Food and Drug Administration about testing a proprietary, purified version of leucovorin.


A new formulation of the decades-old drug would mean new patents, allowing Frye and his yet-to-formed drug company to charge far more than the cheap generics currently on the market.


“We have a lot of investors who are excited about leucovorin and want to do something high quality for kids with autism,” he said.


But the FDA’s announcement Monday may have scuttled that plan. Instead of previewing a new version, the agency said it would simply update the label on the generic drug to mention use in boosting folate brain levels, including for patients with autism. That’s expected to encourage more doctors to prescribe it and insurers to cover it.


Promising autism treatments often fail after more study


Specialists who have spent decades treating autistic patients say it’s important to proceed carefully and methodically.


Gray recalls other experimental treatments that initially looked promising only to fail in larger studies.
“Small studies often find populations that are very motivated,” Gray said. “But when those therapies are moved into larger studies, the initial positive findings often disappear.”


Among the challenges facing leucovorin: There isn’t agreement about what portion of autism patients have the folate-blocking antibodies supposedly targeted by the drug.


Frye screens his patients for the antibodies using a test developed at a laboratory at the State University of New York. Like many specialty tests, it has not been reviewed by the FDA.


Gray says the only way to definitively test for the antibodies would be by extracting cranial fluid from children with autism through a spinal tap.


“That’s a big limiting factor in having these large, randomized controlled trials,” Gray said.


Online sources are driving interest from parents

While the Trump administration discusses fast-tracking leucovorin, interest in the drug continues to swirl online, including in forums and social media groups for parents of children with autism.


Brian Noonan, of Phoenix, found out about the drug earlier this year after asking ChatGPT for the best autism drug options for his 4-year-old son.


The FDA has never approved any drug for the underlying causes of autism, but the chatbot directed Noonan to Frye’s research.


After an evaluation and confirmatory blood test, the boy started on a formulation of the drug from a compounding pharmacy in June.


Within days, Noonan says, he saw improvement in his son’s ability to make eye contact and form sentences.


“He’s not cured, but these are just areas of improvement,” Noonan said. “It’s been a big thing for us.”

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein

MORE International ARTICLES

Sunak fights to save his Premiership as MPs seek revised immigration bill

Sunak fights to save his Premiership as MPs seek revised immigration bill
The UK's Indian-origin British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, 43, was looking at an uncertain future on Monday afternoon, following a right-wing faction of his Conservative party being informed that a parliamentary Bill on which he has virtually staked his future was a "partial and incomplete solution" to the problem of sending back illegal asylum seekers from Britain. The UK government wants to deport such arrivals to Rwanda, with which it has signed a treaty.

Sunak fights to save his Premiership as MPs seek revised immigration bill

Haley, Ramaswamy to spar at 4th GOP presidential debate as Christie expected to attack Trump

Haley, Ramaswamy to spar at 4th GOP presidential debate as Christie expected to attack Trump
Nikki Haley, the closest rival to former President Donald Trump, and Indian American entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy are expected to spar with each other in the fourth GOP-sponsored presidential debate at the University of Alabama on Tuesday night as former ex-New Jersey Governor Chris Christie is expected to hold his own on his anti-Trump stance. Yet former President Donald Trump is most likely to loom large over the debate with his fundraising event in Florida, media reports said.

Haley, Ramaswamy to spar at 4th GOP presidential debate as Christie expected to attack Trump

Israel strikes Hamas stronghold in Jabalia refugee camp

Israel strikes Hamas stronghold in Jabalia refugee camp
Israeli media has reported that Israeli forces had captured a main Hamas outpost in the area, and found tunnels and weapons, the BBC reported. A UN report from Wednesday indicated that "more than 100 people were killed, and many others injured, in heavy bombardments of multiple residential buildings in the Jabalia camp".

Israel strikes Hamas stronghold in Jabalia refugee camp

Gunman among 3 killed in shooting on university campus in Las Vegas

Gunman among 3 killed in shooting on university campus in Las Vegas
In Washington, D.C., the White House said it is monitoring the shooting reported at UNLV. UNLV has a student enrollment of about 25,400 undergraduates and 4,300 graduates.  

Gunman among 3 killed in shooting on university campus in Las Vegas

Trump's top Indian-origin ally says his admin will target media if re-elected

Trump's top Indian-origin ally says his admin will target media if re-elected
A top Indian-origin aide to Donald Trump has threatened action against people in the media -- "criminally or civilly" -- if the former president storms back to power in 2024. Kashyap 'Kash' Patel, who was Trump's counter-terrorism adviser on the National Security Council and chief of staff to the acting secretary of defence, made the remarks on Steve Bannon's War Room podcast.

Trump's top Indian-origin ally says his admin will target media if re-elected

Rishi Sunak in danger of losing his Premiership

Rishi Sunak in danger of losing his Premiership
Rishi Sunak, 42, the Indian-origin British Prime Minister, is fighting with his back to the wall to save his premiership as well as his political career. Sunak, who has staked his future on passing an immigration bill in the British Parliament, which, he thinks, will ensure asylum seekers to the United Kingdom are sent to Rwanda and consequently deter such people from illegally coming to Britain. The United Kingdom has signed an agreement with Rwanda to despatch illegal immigrants to the east African country.

Rishi Sunak in danger of losing his Premiership