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Prenatal exposure to air pollution linked to autism risk, study says

(CNN) Prenatal exposure to ambient air pollution was associated with an increased risk of autism spectrum disorder, a new study finds. Pregnant women in Vancouver who were exposed to the highest level of environmental nitric oxide, an airborne, traffic-related pollutant, were more likely to give birth to children later diagnosed with autism, the researchers say.

Autism spectrum disorder, a developmental disability, is characterized by problems with communication and social interaction with accompanying repetitive behavior patterns.

Lief Pagalan, lead author of the study and a member of the faculty of health sciences at Simon Fraser University, cautions that the study, published Monday in the medical journal JAMA Pediatrics, showed only an association between prenatal exposure to nitric oxide and autism rates. It did not prove that air pollution caused autism.

Experts emphasize that the exact causes of autism remain unknown, and some say the researchers in this study did not analyze every potential risk factor.

Still, the research "adds to the growing concern that there may be no safe levels of exposure to air pollution," Pagalan wrote in an email.

"Not only did we have access to rich data, enabling us to develop one of the largest studies to date, but we were also able to conduct this study in a city with relatively lower levels of air pollution," he said.

More than 100,000 children studied

Pagalan and his colleagues analyzed the records of 129,436 children born in Vancouver from 2004 through 2009.

"We analyzed air pollution data in Vancouver over the same period to assess air pollution exposures in the pregnant woman," he said. "Their children were followed up for at least 5 years to see if they were diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder."

Overall, about 1% of the kids were diagnosed with autism by age 5, the researchers found. They compared autism rates among the children of women who had been exposed to the least amount of air pollution during pregnancy against rates among the children of women exposed to the most.

All three measures of air pollution (particulate matter, nitrogen dioxide and nitric oxide) showed a similar association with autism.

The odds of developing autism among children prenatally exposed to higher levels of PM2.5 (particulate matter less than 2.5 micrometers in diameter) were 1.04%, the odds of autism in children exposed to higher levels of nitrogen dioxide were 1.06%, and the odds of autism in children exposed to higher levels of nitric oxide were 1.07%. This final increased risk proved to be "statistically significant," which means it crossed the line from random chance and shows a true relationship.

Studies in the United States, including one in Los Angeles County, have shown that living close to a highway where air quality is poor may be a possible trigger of autism, yet three European studies -- including one that looked at Sweden, the Netherlands, Spain and Italy -- have not proved an association, the authors of the new study noted.

Pagalan said the causes of autism are not fully known. "They're complicated and have many factors but researchers recognize that genetics and environmental factors both play a role," he said.

Experts say that any association between air pollution and autism is small at best.

Autism runs in families, and its causes remain unknown

Robin P. Goin-Kochel, associate director for research at Texas Children's Autism Center and associate professor at the Baylor College of Medicine, said families should "take these results with a grain of salt." Goin-Kochel, who was not involved in the new study, emphasized that it found only an association, which "does not equate to causation."

Still, she believes the authors "nicely addressed" some shortcomings in previous studies of the same subject. For example, the criteria for children with autism included only those who had received a "gold-standard" diagnosis, based on data from the British Columbia Autism Assessment Network.

However, other important factors were not included in the analysis, she said, such as socioeconomic status, which has been shown to be linked with autism.

"Also, the focus was on the mothers' residential locale, and it's possible that mothers' work locales have a different environmental makeup that might be important to consider," she wrote in an email. "It's possible that these pollutants and/or other exposures have an influence on fathers and the quality of their sperm."

James Cusack, director of science at Autistica, a UK charity, told the Science Media Centre that the new research "should not concern people thinking about having children."

"Autism is strongly genetic. We know this because it runs in families," said Cusack, who was not involved in the study. He added that the researchers found only "a tiny increase" in the likelihood of having an autistic child for women exposed to more air pollution, specifically nitric oxide. "Other differences which were not measured, such as genetic differences, may explain this increase. This study does not provide evidence that air pollution causes autism."

Kevin McConway, emeritus professor of applied statistics at The Open University, told Science Media Centre that the new study is "careful" but the results are "a bit hard to interpret."

"In broad terms, the results of the study were much the same for all three pollutants," said McConway, who played no part in the new research. However, only nitric oxide went "over the conventional boundary of statistical significance," he said, "and only just over."

"It's not really possible in studies like this to truly sort out what causes what," he said. "Perhaps air pollution does really affect [autism] risk, or perhaps it doesn't." Although the study "adds more evidence," he concluded, "we're a very long way from knowing."

Pagalan said that because there's no cure for autism, "identifying environmental risk factors helps identify opportunities for prevention."

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