Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Study Suggests Infants Be Tested For Autism If Older Siblings Diagnosed

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Dec, 2019 08:55 PM

    VANCOUVER - Canadian researchers have led a study suggesting infants be tested for autism spectrum disorder before symptoms appear if an older sibling has already been diagnosed with the neurobiological condition.

     

    The odds of a younger sibling having autism are up to 20 per cent, but most children miss out on early intervention for challenges in behaviour and communication because they're often not diagnosed until age four, previous studies have shown.

     

    Research by Dr. Stephen Scherer, senior scientist and director of the Centre for Applied Genomics at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, and Dr. Lonnie Zwaigenbaum, a professor of pediatrics at the University of Alberta, found a standard blood test analyzing the DNA of infants with a sibling who's been diagnosed with autism would provide earlier information for families.

     

    The findings were published Thursday in the journal Nature Communications.

     

    They involve 288 infant siblings from Canada and the United States showing that by age three, 157 of the children were either diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder or developing atypically. Of the 157 children, seven per cent were carrying a gene that put them at a very high risk of developing autism.

     

    Of the seven per cent of kids, 50 per cent were diagnosed with autism by age three and an additional 35 per cent had other developmental challenges.

     

    Scherer said families of autistic children are often concerned about whether a sibling could also be at risk.

     

    "It's the number one question families have and no one's ever wrapped any statistics around that and that's what we present for the first time, with this paper," he said.

     

    Further genetic testing looking at the entire genome, beyond a blood test called microarray analysis, is being conducted with all the families in the study in hopes it will provide more information about the risk of autism, Scherer said.

     

    The participants were part of the Baby Siblings Research Consortium, which includes independent research groups in Canada, the United States and Europe, though this study included 10 sites in North America, four of them in Canada, Zwaigenbaum said of the testing that is part of an ongoing decade-long research project looking at behavioural predictors of autism.

     

    "Based on the findings of the study, we're suggesting that the test be focused on younger siblings," he said. "What we're arguing is that it could be informative at a time where we're not likely to see any behavioural signs. So it provides an option for presymptomatic testing to identify infants at highest risk."

     

    Families who are informed about a younger child's risk of autism could initiate strategies to help children develop early communication skills before assessment of behaviour by a specialist and intervention by a therapist as part of a cost-effective approach to care, Zwaigenbaum said.

     

    "I think we may be moving to an exciting new time where both biomarkers and developmental surveillance can provide complementary information to help us identify infants at risk."

     

    Further research could lead to a change in practice recommending siblings be given the readily available test for autism, he said.

     

    The study also found that children did not necessarily inherit or share all the genetic variants with an older sibling with autism, which is consistent with previous research.

     

    Long wait lists for assessment of children exhibiting signs of autism is a major concern among families across Canada, and both Scherer and Zwaigenbaum acknowledged that is problematic.

     

    "It's not happening fast enough but we can't hold back the science because of it," Scherer said.

     

    "The current system doesn't have the capacity to respond but (the study) definitely moves the needle in terms of the potential to develop strategies that could be applied presymptomatically," Zwaigenbaum said. "It really further accelerates the move to earlier and earlier intervention."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    UN Seat Not Top Priority, Scheer Says After Pledging Foreign-Aid Cuts

    OTTAWA - Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer says he believes it is more important to help out Canadians at home than to seek a seat on the United Nations Security Council.    

    UN Seat Not Top Priority, Scheer Says After Pledging Foreign-Aid Cuts

    Nothing 'Sinister' About Airport Questioning Of Huawei Exec Meng Wanzhou: Crown

    VANCOUVER - The actions of Canadian officials during the arrest of Huawei Technologies executive Meng Wanzhou at Vancouver's airport were "not at all sinister" and followed their legal obligations, a Crown prosecutor says.    

    Nothing 'Sinister' About Airport Questioning Of Huawei Exec Meng Wanzhou: Crown

    Fish Farm Deaths, Escapes Raise Concerns About Atlantic Aquaculture Industry

    Northern Harvest Sea Farms, owned by the Norwegian company Mowi, attributed the deaths to an extended period of high water temperatures, between 17 and 21 degrees Celsius.    

    Fish Farm Deaths, Escapes Raise Concerns About Atlantic Aquaculture Industry

    Winnipeg Man Suffers Bites During Multiple Attacks By Bear In Ontario Woods

    Winnipeg Man Suffers Bites During Multiple Attacks By Bear In Ontario Woods
    Dave Schwab, who is 69, says he was finishing his walk near Kenora last Thursday when he spotted a black bear about 100 metres ahead of him in some bushes.

    Winnipeg Man Suffers Bites During Multiple Attacks By Bear In Ontario Woods

    Brampton Children Aatish Kapoor (10), Jasleen Cruz (8) in Parental Abduction Have Been Found

    Investigators from the 22 Division Criminal Investigation Bureau have located the mother and the children from a parental abduction investigation.

    Brampton Children Aatish Kapoor (10), Jasleen Cruz (8) in Parental Abduction Have Been Found

    Police Investigating Fatal Daylight Shooting In Surrey’s Clayton Heights, Release Video Footage Of Suspect

    At approximately 6:00 pm on September 28, 2019, Surrey RCMP responded after receiving multiple 911 calls reporting a shooting in the 18600-block of Fraser Highway.

    Police Investigating Fatal Daylight Shooting In Surrey’s Clayton Heights, Release Video Footage Of Suspect