4.2 Article

Head circumference and height in autism: A study by the Collaborative Program of Excellence in Autism

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS PART A
Volume 140A, Issue 21, Pages 2257-2274

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.a.31465

Keywords

autism; autism-spectrum disorder; head circumference; macrocephaly; height

Funding

  1. NICHD NIH HHS [P01 HD035468, P01 HD035476, HD035470, P01 HD035470, HD35466, HD35468, U19 HD035468, P01 HD035469, HD35476, P01 HD035466, HD34565, U19 HD035482, U19 HD035476, P01 HD035482, U19 HD035470, HD35469, HD 35482, U19 HD035469, U19 HD035466] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIDCD NIH HHS [DC03610, P01 DC003610, U19 DC003610] Funding Source: Medline

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Data from 10 sites of the NICHD/NIDCD Collaborative Programs of Excellence in Autism were combined to Study the distribution of head circumference and relationship to demographic and clinical variables. Three hundred thirty-eight probands with autism-spectruin disorder (ASD) including 208 probands with autism were studied along with 147 parents: 149 siblings, and typically developing controls. ASDs were diagnosed, and head circumference and clinical variables measured in a standardized manner across all sites. All Subjects with autism met ADI-R, ADOS-G, DSM-IV, and ICD-10 criteria. The results show the distribution of standardized head circumference in autism is normal in shape, and the mean, variance; and rate of macrocephaly but not microcephaly are increased. Head circumference tends to be large relative to height in autism. No site, gender, age, SES, verbal, or non-verbal IQ effects were present in the autism sample. In addition to autism itself, standardized height and average parental head circumference were the most important factors predicting head circumference in individuals with autism. Mean standardized head circumference and rates of macrocephaly were similar in probands with autism and their parents. Increased head circumference was associated with a higher (more severe) ADI-R social algorithm score. Macrocephaly is associated with delayed onset of language. Although mean head circumference and rates of macrocephaly are increased in autism, a high degree of variability is present, underscoring the complex clinical heterogeneity of the disorder. The wide distribution of head circumference in autism has major implications for genetic, neuroimaging, and other neurobiological research. (c) 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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