Health
Information & Media -
Publications -
Autism and the MMR Vaccine
Is there any research going on to find out if the MMR vaccine is
linked to autism?
The NIH is doing a number of things to
look into the claims about MMR vaccines and autism:
- The Network on
the Neurobiology and Genetics of Autism: Collaborative
Programs of Excellence in Autism (CPEA), funded by the
NICHD and the
National Institute on
Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD), with
additional funding from the CDC, are working together to
study autism and the MMR vaccine. This research will examine
people diagnosed with autism who seemed to develop normally,
but then started to show autistic symptoms. This type of
situation is called regression. To learn as much as possible
about these patients, researchers will compare them to people
who do not have autism, and to people who showed autistic
symptoms since birth, called classic autism. CPEA researchers
will compare vaccination records to see if the onset of autism
was associated with receipt of MMR and other vaccines. Lab
tests will then look for any evidence of persistent infections
that could be related to the MMR vaccine.
- The NICHD is also working
with other NIH Institutes, the
CDC, the Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA), and other federal agencies to conduct a large,
long-term study of the effects of the environment on
childrens health. This study will follow 100,000 children
from before birth to age 20, to track their growth and
development, as well as their genetic blueprints and
environmental factors that they encounter. Researchers hope to
establish or rule out links between a variety of environmental
events and normal and abnormal development, such as autism,
asthma, and other childhood disorders that have shown dramatic
increase. The study is currently under design.
- Another NIH Institute, the
National Institute of
Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) is also
conducting a retrospective case-control study to identify any
molecular markers in neonatal blood of children with autism,
with support from the California Department of Health Services
and the Division of Bioengineering and Physical Science
(DBEPS) at the NIH.
- In 1998, the NIH, led by the NICHD and the
NINDS, sponsored a
conference on ASDs. These and other NIH Institutes formed an
expert panel, which also included 15 professional
organizations and three parents groups, and began a review of
over 2,500 scientific articles to develop a system for
diagnosing ASDs. The panel published its findings in the
Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders in 1999
(Filipek et al 1999). In 2000, the panels report was adopted
as a practice parameter by the American Academy of Neurology
and the Child Neurology
Society (Filipek et al 2000). Practice parameter:
screening and diagnosis of autism gives doctors and other
health professionals the first, standardized method for
diagnosing autism and ASDs based on scientific evidence.
In addition, the NIH is in the process of implementing
the autism aspects of the Childrens Health Act of 2000. This Act,
which was signed into law in October 2000, charges the NIH with the,
Expansion, intensification, and coordination of activities of the
NIH with respect to research on autism. All of the NIH Institutes
that fund autism research are working together to establish Centers
of Excellence to focus on autism research. In addition, the NIH
will form a committee with representatives from parents groups and
other federal agencies to coordinate autism research activities
throughout the federal government and to enhance efforts to educate
doctors and other health care professionals, and parents, and other
child caretakers, about autism.
first | previous
|
next |
last |