Experts call Kennedy's plan to find autism's cause unrealistic
[May 12, 2025]
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
WASHINGTON (AP) — For many experts, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy
Jr. ’s promise for “pulling back the curtain” to find autism's causes in
a few months is jarring — and unrealistic.
That’s because it appears to ignore decades of science linking about 200
genes that play a role — and the quest to understand differences inside
the brain that can be present at birth.
“Virtually all the evidence in the field suggests whatever the causes of
autism — and there’s going to be multiple causes, it’s not going to be a
single cause — they all affect how the fetal brain develops,” said
longtime autism researcher David Amaral of the UC Davis MIND Institute.
“Even though we may not see the behaviors associated with autism until a
child is 2 or 3 years old, the biological changes have already taken
place,” he said.
Kennedy on Wednesday announced the National Institutes of Health would
create a new database “to uncover the root causes of autism and other
chronic diseases” by merging Medicaid and Medicare insurance claims with
electronic medical records and other data. He has cited rising autism
rates as evidence of an epidemic of a “preventable disease” caused by
some sort of environmental exposure and has promised “some of the
answers by September.”
What is autism?
Autism isn’t considered a disease. It's a complex brain disorder better
known as autism spectrum disorder, to reflect that it affects different
people in different ways.

Symptoms vary widely. For some people, profound autism means being
nonverbal and having significant intellectual disabilities. Others have
far milder effects, such as difficulty with social and emotional skills.
Autism rates are rising — not among profound cases but milder ones, said
autism expert Helen Tager-Flusberg of Boston University.
That's because doctors gradually learned that milder symptoms were part
of autism’s spectrum, leading to changes in the late 1990s and early
2000s in diagnosis guidelines and qualifications for educational
services, she said.
What’s the state of autism research?
The link between genes and autism dates back to studies of twins decades
ago. Some are rare genetic variants passed from parent to child, even if
the parent shows no signs of autism.
But that's not the only kind. As the brain develops, rapidly dividing
cells make mistakes that can lead to mutations in only one type of cell
or one part of the brain, Amaral explained.
Noninvasive testing can spot differences in brain activity patterns in
babies who won't be diagnosed with autism until far later, when symptoms
become apparent, he said.
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Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., left,
following a tour of the Texas A&M AgriLife Phenotyping Greenhouse in
College Station, Texas on Tuesday, April 29, 2025.(Meredith Seaver
/College Station Eagle via AP)
 Those kinds of changes stem from
alterations in brain structure or its neural circuitry — and
understanding them requires studying brain tissue that’s available
only after death, said Amaral, who’s the scientific director of a
brain banking collaborative called Autism BrainNet. The bank, funded
by the nonprofit Simons Foundation, has collected more than 400
donated brains, about half from people with autism and the rest for
comparison.
What about environmental effects?
Researchers have identified other factors that can interact with
genetic vulnerability to increase the risk of autism. They include
the age of a child’s father, whether the mother had certain health
problems during pregnancy including diabetes, use of certain
medications during pregnancy, and preterm birth.
Any concern that measles vaccinations could be linked to autism has
been long debunked, stressed Tager-Flusberg, who leads a new
Coalition of Autism Scientists pushing back on administration
misstatements about the condition.
What about Kennedy’s database plan?
The U.S., with its fragmented health care system, will never have
the kind of detailed medical tracking available in countries like
Denmark and Norway — places with national health systems where
research shows similar rises in autism diagnoses and no
environmental smoking gun.
Experts say Kennedy's planned database isn't appropriate to uncover
autism's causes in part because there's no information about
genetics.
But researchers have long used insurance claims and similar data to
study other important questions, such as access to autism services.
And the NIH described the upcoming database as useful for studies
focusing on access to care, treatment effectiveness and other
trends.
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