4.4 Article

Disease Burden and Symptom Structure of Autism in Neurofibromatosis Type 1 A Study of the International NF1-ASD Consortium Team (INFACT)

Journal

JAMA PSYCHIATRY
Volume 73, Issue 12, Pages 1276-1284

Publisher

AMER MEDICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2016.2600

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Funding

  1. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) [U54 HD087011]
  2. Neurological Sciences Academic Development Award at Washington University School of Medicine [K12 NS001690]
  3. NIH [1DP2OD007449]
  4. Opening the Future grant of Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
  5. Manchester Biomedical Research Center Clinical Research Fellowship
  6. Central Manchester Foundation Trust Research and Innovation Award

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IMPORTANCE Recent reports have demonstrated a higher incidence of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and substantially elevated autistic trait burden in individuals with neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1). However, important discrepancies regarding the distribution of autistic traits, sex predominance, and association between ASD symptoms and attentional problems have emerged, and critical features of the ASD phenotype within NF1 have never been adequately explored. Establishing NF1 as a monogenic cause for ASD has important implications for affected patients and for future research focused on establishing convergent pathogenic mechanisms relevant to the potential treatment targets for ASD. OBJECTIVE To characterize the quantitative autistic trait (QAT) burden in a pooled NF1 data set. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Anonymized, individual-level primary datawere accumulated from 6 tertiary referral centers in the United States, Belgium, United Kingdom, and Australia. A total of 531 individuals recruited from NF1 clinical centers were included in the study. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Distribution of ASD traits (Social Responsiveness Scale, second edition [SRS-2], with T scores of >= 75 associated with a categorical ASD diagnosis); attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) traits (4 versions of Conners Rating Scale, with T scores of >= 65 indicating clinically significant ADHD symptoms); ASD symptom structure, latent structure, base rate derived from mixture modeling; and familiality. RESULTS Of the 531 patients included in the analysis, 247 were male (46.5%); median age was 11 years (range, 2.5-83.9 years). QAT scores were continuously distributed and pathologically shifted; 13.2%(95% CI, 10.3%-16.1%) of individuals scored within the most severe range (ie, above the first percentile of the general population distribution) in which the male to female ratio was markedly attenuated (1.6: 1) relative to idiopathic ASD. Autistic symptoms in this NF1 cohort demonstrated a robust unitary factor structure, with the first principal component explaining 30.9% of the variance in SRS-2 scores, and a strong association with ADHD symptoms (r = 0.61). Within-family correlation for QAT burden (intraclass correlation coefficient, 0.73 in NF1-affected first-degree relatives) exceeded that observed in the general population and ASD family samples. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE This study provides confirmation that the diversity of mutations that give rise to NF1 function as quantitative trait loci for ASD. Moreover, the within-family correlation implicates a high degree of mutational specificity for this associated phenotype. Clinicians should be alerted to the increased frequency of this disabling comorbidity, and the scientific community should be aware of the potential for this monogenic disorder to help elucidate the biological features of idiopathic autism.

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