April 21, 2010 11:03 AM

Autism Challenges American Science to Seek Cure

By
Mark Strassmann
(CBS)  In our "Where America Stands" series, CBS News is looking at a broad spectrum of issues facing the country in the new decade.



The struggles of parents and children coping with autism was in focus again when an 11-year-old autistic girl in Florida was found Tuesday in a swamp, incredibly four days after going missing.

Her story had a happy ending, but for millions of children, many challenges remain, CBS News Correspondent Mark Strassmann reports.

Autism is a brain disorder, typically diagnosed when a child is 2 or 3. Among Americans, it has skyrocketed 600 percent over the last two decades from 1 in 1,500 kids in the 1990's to 1 in 110 kids today and 1 in 70 boys.

Dr. Geraldine Dawson is chief science officer for Autism Speaks, the world's leading autism advocacy group.

"We know that the numbers are increasing," Dawson said. "It's really staggering, and we're still trying to understand why."

With autism, the need dwarfs the U.S. government response. It spends less than $300 million a year on autism research and services, yet the cost of those services and care is $35 billion dollars.

The problem with autism is no one knows for sure why it's increasing.

Like autistic kids, researchers are taking in a lot of information. The challenge is making sense of it all. Until now, they've been able to collect the dots. They just can't seem to connect the dots.

Autism experts say it's not just one disease but many and that they're largely genetic with possible environmental triggers such as toxins or pesticides and still largely a mystery. Autistic people fall on a spectrum of symptoms and severity.

"What's common among all those individuals is that difficulty in the area of social interaction," Dawson said.

As a toddler, Brennan Henderson babbled but wouldn't talk and had frightening tantrums. Adam Peterson was easily rattled, a case of endless crying over spilled milk.

"His initial response to that is anxiety, 'Oh my gosh, something didn't happen the way it was supposed to happen,'" Donna Peterson said

Socially, all autistic kids like Ben Fink have trouble connecting.

"He wants to interact with kids, but he doesn't quite know how," Jonathan Fink said.

Through therapy, all three boys have made great strides, but almost all parents of autistic kids struggle to find help and to understand the disease.

"Everybody has opinions, but there is no course of treatment," said Donna Peterson. "There is no standard of care, and as it is now, we are putting things together like with duct tape and spit."

The Solution

Part of the solution may come at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. There, a lab's testing the DNA of autism in a revolutionary way.

Dr. Hakon Hakonarson is the hospital's director of the Center for Applied Genomics. He's found two-thirds of autistic people share a certain gene mutation.

"If I was able to fix this gene or eliminate it, how many autism cases would then go away?" Hakonarson asked. "That is as high as 15 percent - one-five - 15 percent of cases."

At Children's, Ben Fink and Adam Peterson are both part of more cutting-edge research. For Fink, it's magnetic-resonance imaging done on his brain's wiring, its fibre pathways. Autistic brains don't make needed connections, and Dr. Robert Schultz, the director of the Center for Autism Research, is asking why.

"We are all trying to figure out where are the connections, the most different from a typically developing child," Schultz said. "Ben falls right into the pattern we would expect."

The magnetic-resonance scan shows red "hot spots, indicating the brain's response to social interaction. On Fink's scan, there are no red spots, often the case with autistic children.

In another wing of the hospital, Adam Peterson's part of a different study on how quickly the brain processes sound.

Dr. Tim Roberts said the brains of 8 of every 10 autistic kids respond to a sound as simple as a beep one-hundredth of a second late.

For example, in a casual conversation about Roberts's study, autistic children would be 10 words behind or longer.

"Suddenly they would find complex conversations," said Roberts. "These delays would add up and cascade."

This could be the first imaging bio-marker ever to predict autism, potentially in the first year of life.

At the University of North Carolina, the Henderson family's involved in another study, not Brennan but his 1-year-old brother Samuel.

"They say there might be something going on but it's too early to know decisively," mother Zandra Henderson said.

Siblings of autistic kids have a 20 percent greater chance of being autistic themselves. An infant brain imaging study's focus on changes starts at six months, especially brain enlargement typical of many autistic kids.

Dr. Joe Piven is the director of the Carolina Institute for Developmental Disabilities.

"It gives us some hope that we can begin to focus on this window of opportunity before that brain enlargement or before that onset of autistic behavior," Piven said.

Until science provides the answers, parents like Donna Peterson hope for a cure.

"If someone told me that I could go to Antarctica and hike up to the highest mountain and there would be a shaman up there with the cure, if I knew that was right, I'd be packing up the dogsled," she said.

"One of the things a human being can't live without is hope," said Jeremy Henderson, father of Brennan and Samuel. "We hold on to hope because that's what gets us through."

Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 25 Comments
by autism-awareness October 18, 2011 2:33 AM EDT
Well said "Jeremy Henderson"
"One of the things a human being can't live without is hope,"
While the debate goes on forever whether the vaccine,genetic or whatever causes autism, we still have some hope that some proven or still in process of proven therapies will help our children to progress and can even recover from autism.
If we wouldn't have kept hope 6 years ago, today we wouldn't have seen my son going to regular school and doing academically well. He might have little issues here and there, but largely unnoticed.
Stop blaming and start acting. Early intervention is the key to bringing child out from autism.
http://www.recoveryfromautism.com
Reply to this comment
by nujac123 May 31, 2010 5:39 PM EDT
Thank you SkepticalMom!
Reply to this comment
by P0ST1ING_AWAY April 19, 2010 7:48 PM EDT
To: DawnBroderick40

This is a slight misconception which somehow got spread around by the popular press...................................

There are two types of people who believe in the vaccination fairy tale.

(1) Morons
and
(2) Parents looking for somebody else to pay for their misfortune.
Reply to this comment
by SkepticalMom April 20, 2010 12:13 PM EDT
There are two types of people who don't believe in the vaccination/autism link.

1. Pharma employees, including doctors on their extensive payrolls.
2. Social marketing employees under contract to post on the web.

Everyone else pretty much knows the truth, which is why there's a big old pile of mouldering H1N1 vaccine about to expire that will have to be disposed of as hazardous toxic waste due to its high mercury content.
by P0ST1ING_AWAY April 19, 2010 7:46 PM EDT
by nogggin April 18, 2010 6:40 PM EDT
Um, where IS Poul Thorsen, anyway?

The main stream media has been all over the Wakefield ........
=======================================================
Any time you see the words "mainstream media" ....
you know you are about to read some right-wing-idiot
krap that you can year every night on Faux Noise .....
Reply to this comment
by nogggin April 18, 2010 6:40 PM EDT
Um, where IS Poul Thorsen, anyway?

The main stream media has been all over the Wakefield retraction like flies on dog turds. Even though there's never been one parent who's had a complaint about him, even though in fact the parents who've been involved with him have nothing but praise for his work. The Lancet took twelve years in order to come to a decision about that paper. And I'm sure it's just coincidence that they finally came to the conclusion they did a few days after the General Medical Council found against him. At the trial where none of the parents involved were allowed to speak in his defense.

And now we have the main stream media, in between pharmaceutical commercials, ignoring the disappearance of one of the major authors on one of the most widely cited 'safety studies'. So what if he disappeared with two million dollars of CDC money? We are all still supposed to respect his research, and the results of that research. 'Vaccines are safe. Always have been. Always will be. Nothing to see here, folks, move along now.'

Americans don't give a rat's rear end because they think it doesn't affect them or the people they love. I predict that it won't be too long now before it starts to sink in. The same people who allowed this to happen to the vaccine damaged are still in charge of YOUR health. You've been lucky so far. Your luck can't possibly hold out in the face of this kind of corruption.

And oh, btw, to all of those who insist it's purely genetic ? Scientific American, January '09. Oh and something else, btw. There's STILL mercury in your flu shots. The same old, toxic level. That's right, the people on your radio and television and in your newspapers have been lying to you.

Congratulations, America. You've got the health care system you deserve.
Reply to this comment
by travelers345 April 18, 2010 3:12 PM EDT
I sometimes think autism is evolution at work. There are, after all, things that autistic people can do that 'normal' people are incapable of. They are mathematical savants sometimes and their memories are often amazing.
Reply to this comment
by SkepticalMom April 19, 2010 8:07 PM EDT
Yeah, right. All those non-verbal autistic kids are so amazing, they've led to the diaper manufacturers making bigger sizes to accommodate older kids. They amaze us with their seizures, life-threatening food allergies, severe gastro-intestinal illnesses. They have a superhuman ability to crash the finances of families and school districts around the nation, since insurance won't cover them or pay for most treatments, and in the near future they will unite to crash the federal disability system as well.

You are so right, "normal" people haven't been able to do any of those things. By all means, let's celebrate and keep decanting those Epsilons by injecting toxins and ruining their immune systems. Because the world needs more Physically and emotionally disabled head-bangers.

The only "evolution" this travesty represents is the "evolution" of a profitable back-scratching arrangement between Pharma and the people who are supposed to be regulating them but instead look the other way. This is a wholly man-made disaster. And it's being abetted by the media, which has utterly failed the people of this country.
by P0ST1ING_AWAY April 18, 2010 11:39 AM EDT
by jankebenzone April 18, 2010 4:31 AM EDT
The story says that the incidence of autism has increased some 600 percent in the last few decades. What has changed in yhat time period which would cause such an increase ?........................................
==============================================================
Your pedestrian analysis is incomplete.
The "huge" increase in autism diagnosis is a farce.
Doctors are merely diagnosing as autism that with used to
be classified as 'retarded' or 'slow' etc.
Reply to this comment
by McalllisterBrooks April 18, 2010 9:17 PM EDT
I wish that this category substitution were the solution to the rise in diagnosis. But there are two things that make it unlikely. The first is that there has not been a corresponding decrease in the diagnosis of MR, etc. The second is that children with autism do not resemble children with MR. Psychologists who do diagnostic assessments would be unlikely to confuse the two.
by P0ST1ING_AWAY April 18, 2010 11:35 AM EDT
by SCRankin April 18, 2010 11:14 AM EDT
Didn't those doctors at CHOP learn in medical school that you cannot have a genetic epidemic? This appears to be just another article to deflect attention from vaccines..........................................
=========================================================
Hate to burst your bubble but ..... only two types of people
are still buying into the vaccine B. S.
(1) Morons
and
(2) Parents looking to make a fast buck with lawsuits.
Reply to this comment
by McalllisterBrooks April 18, 2010 9:59 PM EDT
Vaccine manufacturers are protected from liability for vaccine injury by federal law. Parents cannot "make a fast buck," or any buck, by misrepresenting their children's illnesses in court. There is a federal court of vaccine claims that will hear claims of vaccine injury and award monitary sums, although the burdon of proof is enormous, and the "buck" is not fast. No one interested in making money through a scam would choose this torturous route.
by SCRankin April 18, 2010 11:14 AM EDT
Didn't those doctors at CHOP learn in medical school that you cannot have a genetic epidemic? This appears to be just another article to deflect attention from vaccines. You don't inject, ingest and expose a child to toxins and expect nothing to happen. Our children have been exposed to various toxins during a critical period of brain development. Since 1991 children have been injected with a toxin on the day of birth. Add exposures from other chemicals in our food and environment, and should we wonder why our kids are so sick? As a medical professional, I have witnessed a huge increase in developmental or chronic medical diseases in children today compared to 20 years ago. Hey docs at CHOP, open your damn eyes and ask the tough questions!
Reply to this comment
by longtree-2009 April 18, 2010 5:41 AM EDT
wonder if the age of parents has anything to do with autism and other children born with disabilities? always thought the best child bearing years was late teens, to late 20s. seems many are having children in their 40s these days and fathers are even older at times.
Reply to this comment
by differnet April 18, 2010 8:09 AM EDT
Mulitple studies have shown that the overwhelming single one indicator of autism is the age of the father at conception. Odds increase dramatically for each decade after a man's 20s. One study found that children of fathers who were 15 to 29 years of age had a risk of about six in 10,000 of developing autism. Children of fathers in their thirties had a risk of nine in 10,000. Children of fathers in their forties had a risk of 32 in 10,000, and children of fathers who were older than 50 had a risk of 52 in 10,000. Delaying fatherhood is risky.
by DawnBroderick40 April 18, 2010 9:15 AM EDT
Now that vaccinations have been completely and totally debunked and have NO correlation whatsoever to autism, now we have to grasp at straws and make up things? You couldn't be any more wrong with your fake speculation. ....Oh and to 'skepticalmom' below, there are PLENTY of research that has mapped out definitive genetic markers to autism. My gosh are so many of the people who post here that uneducated and out of touch with things? It's losers like that Jenny McCarthy nut, seeking to alarm parents into not getting their children vaccinated, that cause this lunacy. She should be held accountable when all these once, almost eradicated illnesses come back (like pertussis is) and kill children. Irresponsible money seeking pole dancer is what that scum is. Get educated and stop trying to blame vaccines, which have nothing to do with autism. Do you all also believe that a knife under the bed cuts the pain during childbirth? People once believed that too (rolling my eyes)
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