20% off OptiSlim

Info Location Account

Useful Links:

Contact Quick Order
Free shipping on all NZ orders over $125* Register or sign in now Shop now, pay later with Afterpay

Get 10% off your first purchase with
Your Online Pharmacy by using the code

WELCOME10

Shop now

Women who reported not taking a daily prenatal vitamin immediately before and during the first month of pregnancy were nearly twice as likely to have a child with an autism spectrum disorder as women who did take the supplements — and the associated risk rose to seven times as great when combined with a high-risk genetic make-up, a study by researchers at the UC Davis MIND Institute has found.

"Mothers  of  children with autism were significantly less likely than those of  typically developing children to report having taken prenatal vitamins  during the three months before and the first month of pregnancy,” said  Rebecca J. Schmidt, assistant professor in the Department of Public  Health Sciences in the UC Davis School of Medicine and the study’s lead  author Rebecca J. Schmidt, Ph.D.

The finding was “strong and robust,” the study authors said, and is the  first to suggest a concrete step women can take that may reduce the risk of having a child with autism. The study, "Prenatal vitamins, functional one-carbon metabolism gene variants, and risk for autism in the CHARGE Study," is published online today on the website of the  journal  EPIDEMIOLOGY. It is scheduled to appear in print in July

Consuming  prenatal vitamins may be especially effective for genetically  susceptible mothers and their children. For women with a particular  high-risk genetic make up who reported not taking prenatal vitamins, the  estimated risk of having a child with autism was as much as seven times  greater than in women who did report taking prenatal vitamins and who  had more favorable gene variants, the study found.

The authors  postulate that folic acid, the synthetic form of folate or vitamin B9,  and the other B vitamins in prenatal supplements, likely protect against  deficits in early fetal brain development. Folate is known to be  critical to neurodevelopment and studies have found that supplemental  folic acid has the potential to prevent up to 70 percent of neural tube  defects, the authors said.

“This finding appears to be the first  example of gene-environment interaction in autism,” said Irva  Hertz-Picciotto, professor and chief of the division of environmental  and occupational health in the Department of Public Health Sciences in  the UC Davis School of Medicine.

“It is widely accepted that  autism spectrum disorders are the result of multiple factors, that  it would be extremely rare to find someone who had a single cause for  this behavioral syndrome. Nevertheless, previous work on genes has  generally ignored the possibility that genes may act in concert with  environmental exposures,” said Hertz-Picciotto, the study's senior  author and a researcher affiliated with the UC Davis MIND Institute.

To  conduct the study, researchers collected data from approximately 700  Northern California families with 2- to 5-year-old children who had autism or typical development and were participants in the Childhood  Autism Risk from Genetics and the Environment (CHARGE) study between  from January 2003 to December 2009. All children were born in California and came from families that spoke either English or Spanish. The autism  diagnoses were confirmed through testing at the UC Davis MIND Institute.

Women who participated in the CHARGE study were asked  via telephone whether they took prenatal vitamins, multivitamins or  other supplements at any time during the three months prior to and  during their pregnancies and during breastfeeding. If the respondent  said she had taken vitamins, she was further asked what type she took,  at what dosage and frequency and during which months of pregnancy she  consumed them.

“Because the mothers were asked about their vitamin  use years after their pregnancies and after their child’s developmental  status was known, some error is expected in their reporting. Moreover,  in comparison with mothers who have an affected child, mothers whose  children are healthy and show typical developmental milestones may be  less likely to remember accurately, simply because they have less reason to reflect on and be concerned about their behaviors years earlier,”  Schmidt said. This could have biased the results, she pointed out.  Further research will be needed to rule out reporting bias.

The  researchers accounted for maternal education and the year the child was  born; results were the same when also accounting for the mother’s age.  However, after the first month of pregnancy, there was no difference  between mothers who did and did not take prenatal vitamins. This  indicates that, by the time most women are aware that they are pregnant,  taking prenatal supplements may not benefit the child in terms of risk  for autism.

Significant interaction effects were observed for two  maternal genes, including a well-studied variant on the  methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) gene associated with less  efficient folate metabolism and increased levels of homocysteine, an  amino acid.

Mothers of children with autism were 4.5 times more  likely to both have the less efficient MTHFR 677 TT genotype and to  report not taking prenatal vitamins during the period around conception  than were mothers of typically developing children.

The other  maternal gene variant with a significant interaction leads to decreased cystathionine-beta-synthase (CBS) activity and elevated plasma  homocysteine. Increased risk for autism was also associated with other  maternal gene variants associated with less efficient one-carbon metabolism, but only if the mother reported not taking the prenatal  vitamins in those early months before and right after conception.

In  addition, being homozygous for a common, functional variant in the  child’s catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) gene was associated with  more than seven times the estimated risk for autism in mothers who reported not taking the supplements around the time of conception,  compared to children with other genotypes whose mothers did report  periconceptional prenatal vitamin intake.

This gene reduces COMT  enzyme activity three- to four-fold. The COMT enzyme, well known for its  role in dopamine degradation, is activated during early  neurodevelopment. Structural and functional brain differences have been  described across COMT genotypes, particularly in the hippocampal and  prefrontal cortex, regions affected by autism.

The finding, if replicated, provides a potential means of reducing the risk of having a child with autism. the authors said.

“The  good news is that if this finding is replicated, it will provide an  inexpensive, relatively simple evidence-based action that women can take  to reduce risks for their child, which is to take prenatal vitamins as  early as possible in a pregnancy and even when planning for pregnancy,”  Hertz-Picciotto said.

Other study authors include Robin L. Hansen,  Linda C. Schmidt and Daniel Tancredi, all of UC Davis, and Jaana  Hartiala and Hooman Allayee, of UCLA.

The study was funded by a  grant from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences of  the National Institutes of Health, including funding provided by the  American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009; a United States  Environmental Protection Agency Science to Achieve Results (STAR) grant;  and a UC Davis MIND Institute Pilot Research Study grant.

The UC Davis MIND (Medical Investigation of Neurodevelopmental  Disorders) Institute, in Sacramento, Calif., was founded in 1998 as a  unique interdisciplinary research center where parents, community  leaders, researchers, clinicians and volunteers collaborate to study and treat autism and other neurodevelopmental disorders. The institute has major research efforts in autism, Tourette syndrome, fragile X syndrome, chromosome 22q11.2 deletion syndrome and  attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). More information about  the institute, including previous presentations in its Distinguished  Lecture Series, is available on the web at http://healthsystem.ucdavis.edu/mindinstitute/.

Back to library