“We know from previous studies that older paternal age is a risk factor for autism,” says lead author Emma Frans. “This study goes beyond that and suggests that older grandpaternal age is also a risk factor for autism, suggesting that risk factors for autism can build up through generations.” (Credit: iStockphoto)

by Seil Collins, King’s College of London

March 23, 2013 (TSR) – Men who become fathers at older ages are more likely to have grandchildren with autism.

The new study shows how risk factors for the condition may accumulate over generations.

By using Swedish national registers, researchers identified 5,936 individuals with autism and 30,923 healthy controls born in Sweden since 1932. They had complete data on each individual’s maternal and paternal grandfathers’ age of reproduction and details of any psychiatric diagnosis.

Published today in JAMA Psychiatry, the study finds that the risk of autism in the grandchild increased the older the age of the grandfather at the time his son or daughter was born.

“We know from previous studies that older paternal age is a risk factor for autism,” says lead author Emma Frans. “This study goes beyond that and suggests that older grandpaternal age is also a risk factor for autism, suggesting that risk factors for autism can build up through generations.” (Credit: iStockphoto)
“We know from previous studies that older paternal age is a risk factor for autism,” says lead author Emma Frans. “This study goes beyond that and suggests that older grandpaternal age is also a risk factor for autism, suggesting that risk factors for autism can build up through generations.” (Credit: iStockphoto)

Men who had a daughter when they were 50 or older were 1.79 times more likely to have a grandchild with autism. Men who had a son when they were 50 or older were 1.67 times more likely to have a grandchild with autism, compared to men who had children when they were 20-24.

“We tend to think in terms of the here and now when we talk about the effect of the environment on our genome,” says co-author Avi Reichenberg of King’s College Institute of Psychiatry.

“For the first time in psychiatry, we show that your father’s and grandfather’s lifestyle choices can affect you. This doesn’t mean that you shouldn’t have children if your father was old when he had you, because whilst the risk is increased, it is still small. However, the findings are important in understanding the complex way in which autism develops.”

Emma Frans, lead author of the study from Karolinska Institutet says: “We know from previous studies that older paternal age is a risk factor for autism. This study goes beyond that and suggests that older grandpaternal age is also a risk factor for autism, suggesting that risk factors for autism can build up through generations.”

In the UK, approximately 1 in 100 adults have an autism spectrum disorder (ASD), with the condition affecting more men than women. The condition affects people in very different ways: some are able to live relatively everyday lives, while others will require a lifetime of specialist support. People with ASD have difficulty communicating with and relating to other people, and making sense of the world around them.

Autism is known to be caused by a combination of genetic and environmental factors. Previous studies have shown that older paternal age is a risk factor for autism in children: fathers aged 50 or older have a more than doubled risk to have a child diagnosed with autism compared to younger fathers.

The mechanism behind this link is unknown, but may be explained by mutations occurring in the male sperm cells. Sperm cells divide over time, and on each division the genome is faced by the possibility of new mutations being introduced.

However, most genetic mutations do not result in the child developing autism. The new findings suggest that these “silent” mutations are passed on to the otherwise healthy child, but may influence the risk of future generations developing autism.  The authors suggest that genetic risk could accumulate over generations, or could interact with other risk factors, until it reaches a threshold resulting in the disorder manifesting itself.

The study was supported by the Swedish Research Council, the Swedish Council for Working Life and Social Research, and the Karolinska Institutet.

Source:

Read the original study here

DOI: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2013.1180

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