While essential B vitamins are important for pregnant women
to prevent the risk of birth defects, very high levels of these nutrients may
significantly increase the risk of delivering a child with autism, researchers
reported here.
In a study of over 1,300 delivering mothers participating in
the Boston Birth Cohort study -- 107 of whom had children who developed autism
-- those who had very high levels of both plasma folate (>59 nmol/L) and
vitamin B12 (>600 pmol/L) were 17.6 times more likely to have a child with
an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) (P<0.001) compared with mothers who had
normal blood levels of these vitamins, said senior study author M. Daniele
Fallin, PhD, of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore.
Hazard ratios were smaller when looking at each vitamin
individually: Women with very high folate levels alone were twice as likely to
have a child with ASD as mothers with normal folate levels, and those with very
high vitamin B12 levels alone were three times as likely to have a child with
ASD as mothers with normal B12 levels, they reported here at the International
Meeting for Autism Research.
"We confirm that adequate levels of folate and B12 are
essential for child development and that supplementation seems to be
protective" against developmental problems like neural tube defects,
Fallin said during a press conference at the meeting.
But it's "possible that extreme levels may be
harmful," she added.
For the study, researchers analyzed data from 1,391
mother-child pairs participating in a prospective study on early life
determinants of autism and other conditions. The study population is
predominantly low-income minority women. Mothers were recruited between 1998
and 2013, at the time of their child's birth, and followed for several years,
with the mother's blood folate and vitamin B12 levels checked once within the
first few days of delivery.
When compared to nonsupplement users, those who had prenatal
supplement intake three to five times per week were less likely to have a child
with ASD -- suggesting the potential for a U-shaped effect, the researchers
said.
When compared to nonsupplement users, those who had prenatal
supplement intake three to five times per week were less likely to have a child
with ASD -- suggesting the potential for a U-shaped effect, the researchers
said.
A limitation of the study is that blood samples were
collected right after birth in the moms and not during pregnancy, Fallin told
MedPage Today, so in future studies she would like to check vitamin levels
during pregnancy. She also would like to tease out why certain women have such
high levels of the vitamins.
http://www.medpagetoday.com/Neurology/Autism/57869
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