Study finds lower male female autism ratios

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ASPartOfMe
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28 Apr 2017, 12:41 am

Estimate of autism’s sex ratio reaches new low

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The ratio of boys to girls who qualify for an autism diagnosis drops to about 3-to-1 in a massive new analysis of published research1.

“It gives us the firmest empirical basis to date to support the idea that autism is probably underdiagnosed in girls,” says Francesca Happé, professor of cognitive neuroscience at King’s College London, who was not involved in the work. “That’s big news, really.”

Most sources put the sex ratio in autism at 4-to-1. The new analysis is based on data from 54 prevalence studies worldwide, with a total of nearly 14 million participants, including 53,712 children with autism. Overall, these studies show that there are 4.2 boys for every girl with autism.

But a lower ratio, 3.25 boys for every girl, emerges from studies in which researchers evaluate participants for autism, rather than interviewing parents or reviewing medical or school records.

The findings have implications for basic research, says study leader William Mandy, senior lecturer in clinical psychology at University College London. “A lot of theorizing about autism is predicated on it being a condition to which males are much more vulnerable than females,” Mandy says. “So I think it’s a pretty important fact to try and get straight.” The results appeared 4 April in the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.

Mandy and his colleagues combed through studies from five continents, conducted between 1992 and 2011. All of the autism diagnoses were based on criteria in the fourth edition of the “Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders” (DSM), which is used primarily in the United States, or the 10th edition of the “International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems.” (No large prevalence studies so far have used criteria from the latest edition of the DSM.)

The analysis uses more rigorous methodology than previous efforts to define the sex ratio in autism. For example, it weights studies according to their sample size and examines how different study characteristics — such as how diagnoses were attained — affect the ratio.

Of the studies, 34 used ‘passive case ascertainment,’ in which researchers identify children with autism by reviewing medical or school records, or telephoning parents to ask if their child has ever received the diagnosis. The remaining 20 used ‘active case ascertainment,’ meaning that researchers evaluated the children.

Passive studies found a sex ratio of about 4.6-to-1 on average, whereas the ratio in active studies fell to 3.25-to-1. “That’s the key contrast in this study,” Mandy says.

The analysis also showed a more even distribution of boys and girls — a 3.1-to-1 ratio — in studies that include a high proportion of children who also have intellectual disability, although less than half of the studies included information about participants’ intelligence.

Mandy is investigating how masking, or ‘camouflaging,’ of autism features affects diagnosis in girls. Studies also show that the ratio of males to females who score poorly on tests of social ability and other autism traits is around 2-to-1. Happé is studying why some of these girls do not meet diagnostic criteria for autism, and asking how girls differ from boys who have similar scores.


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DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity

“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman


cyberdad
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28 Apr 2017, 6:58 am

Looking at autism schools for my daughter next year, I was told by the headmaster that if she enrolled then there is a high chance she will be the only girl in an entire class of boys. Infact in the entire school there is about 10-15 girls out of 500 students which is mind boggling



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02 May 2017, 7:55 am

No wonder most of my friends are male.



BuyerBeware
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03 May 2017, 10:29 am

I LOVE it when research documents what I've been saying for years, and people who wouldn't listen to a word I had to say turn around and wave the research in my face...


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