Autism — what we know (and what we don't know yet) | Wendy Chung

2,364,317 views ・ 2014-04-28

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00:12
"Why?"
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"Why?" is a question
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that parents ask me all the time.
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"Why did my child develop autism?"
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As a pediatrician, as a geneticist, as a researcher,
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we try and address that question.
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But autism is not a single condition.
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It's actually a spectrum of disorders,
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a spectrum that ranges, for instance,
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from Justin, a 13-year-old boy
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who's not verbal, who can't speak,
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who communicates by using an iPad
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to touch pictures to communicate
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his thoughts and his concerns,
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a little boy who, when he gets upset,
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will start rocking,
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and eventually, when he's disturbed enough,
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will bang his head to the point
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that he can actually cut it open and require stitches.
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That same diagnosis of autism, though,
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also applies to Gabriel,
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another 13-year-old boy
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who has quite a different set of challenges.
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He's actually quite remarkably gifted in mathematics.
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He can multiple three numbers by three numbers
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in his head with ease,
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yet when it comes to trying to have a conversation,
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he has great difficulty.
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He doesn't make eye contact.
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He has difficulty starting a conversation,
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feels awkward,
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and when he gets nervous,
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he actually shuts down.
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Yet both of these boys
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have the same diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder.
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One of the things that concerns us
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is whether or not there really is
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an epidemic of autism.
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These days, one in 88 children
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will be diagnosed with autism,
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and the question is,
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why does this graph look this way?
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Has that number been increasing
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dramatically over time?
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Or is it because we have now started labeling
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individuals with autism,
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simply giving them a diagnosis
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when they were still present there before
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yet simply didn't have that label?
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And in fact, in the late 1980s, the early 1990s,
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legislation was passed
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that actually provided individuals with autism
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with resources, with access to educational materials
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that would help them.
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With that increased awareness, more parents,
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more pediatricians, more educators
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learned to recognize the features of autism.
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As a result of that, more individuals were diagnosed
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and got access to the resources they needed.
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In addition, we've changed our definition over time,
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so in fact we've widened the definition of autism,
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and that accounts for some of
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the increased prevalence that we see.
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The next question everyone wonders is,
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what caused autism?
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And a common misconception
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is that vaccines cause autism.
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But let me be very clear:
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Vaccines do not cause autism.
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(Applause)
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In fact, the original research study
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that suggested that was the case
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was completely fraudulent.
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It was actually retracted from the journal Lancet,
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in which it was published,
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and that author, a physician,
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had his medical license taken away from him.
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(Applause)
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The Institute of Medicine,
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The Centers for Disease Control,
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have repeatedly investigated this
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and there is no credible evidence
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that vaccines cause autism.
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Furthermore,
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one of the ingredients in vaccines,
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something called thimerosal,
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was thought to be what the cause of autism was.
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That was actually removed from vaccines
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in the year 1992,
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and you can see that it really did not have an effect
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in what happened with the prevalence of autism.
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So again, there is no evidence
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that this is the answer.
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So the question remains, what does cause autism?
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In fact, there's probably not one single answer.
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Just as autism is a spectrum,
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there's a spectrum of etiologies,
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a spectrum of causes.
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Based on epidemiological data,
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we know that one of the causes,
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or one of the associations, I should say,
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is advanced paternal age,
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that is, increasing age of the father
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at the time of conception.
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In addition, another vulnerable
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and critical period in terms of development
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is when the mother is pregnant.
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During that period, while the fetal brain is developing,
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we know that exposure to certain agents
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can actually increase the risk of autism.
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In particular, there's a medication, valproic acid,
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which mothers with epilepsy sometimes take,
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we know can increase that risk of autism.
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In addition, there can be some infectious agents
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that can also cause autism.
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And one of the things I'm going to spend
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a lot of time focusing on
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are the genes that can cause autism.
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I'm focusing on this not because genes
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are the only cause of autism,
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but it's a cause of autism
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that we can readily define
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and be able to better understand the biology
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and understand better how the brain works
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so that we can come up with strategies
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to be able to intervene.
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One of the genetic factors that we don't understand,
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however, is the difference that we see
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in terms of males and females.
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Males are affected four to one compared to females
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with autism,
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and we really don't understand what that cause is.
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One of the ways that we can understand
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that genetics is a factor
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is by looking at something called
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the concordance rate.
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In other words, if one sibling has autism,
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what's the probability
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that another sibling in that family will have autism?
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And we can look in particular
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at three types of siblings:
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identical twins,
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twins that actually share 100 percent
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of their genetic information
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and shared the same intrauterine environment,
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versus fraternal twins,
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twins that actually share 50 percent
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of their genetic information,
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versus regular siblings,
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brother-sister, sister-sister,
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also sharing 50 percent of their genetic information,
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yet not sharing the same intrauterine environment.
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And when you look at those concordance ratios,
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one of the striking things that you will see
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is that in identical twins,
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that concordance rate is 77 percent.
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Remarkably, though,
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it's not 100 percent.
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It is not that genes account for all of the risk for autism,
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but yet they account for a lot of that risk,
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because when you look at fraternal twins,
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that concordance rate is only 31 percent.
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On the other hand, there is a difference
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between those fraternal twins and the siblings,
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suggesting that there are common exposures
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for those fraternal twins
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that may not be shared as commonly
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with siblings alone.
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So this provides some of the data
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that autism is genetic.
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Well, how genetic is it?
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When we compare it to other conditions
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that we're familiar with,
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things like cancer, heart disease, diabetes,
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in fact, genetics plays a much larger role in autism
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than it does in any of these other conditions.
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But with this, that doesn't tell us what the genes are.
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It doesn't even tell us in any one child,
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is it one gene
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or potentially a combination of genes?
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And so in fact, in some individuals with autism,
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it is genetic!
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That is, that it is one single,
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powerful, deterministic gene
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that causes the autism.
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However, in other individuals,
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it's genetic, that is,
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that it's actually a combination of genes
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in part with the developmental process
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that ultimately determines that risk for autism.
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We don't know in any one person, necessarily,
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which of those two answers it is
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until we start digging deeper.
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So the question becomes,
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how can we start to identify
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what exactly those genes are.
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And let me pose something
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that might not be intuitive.
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In certain individuals,
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they can have autism
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for a reason that is genetic
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but yet not because of autism running in the family.
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And the reason is because in certain individuals,
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they can actually have genetic changes or mutations
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that are not passed down from the mother
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or from the father,
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but actually start brand new in them,
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mutations that are present
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in the egg or the sperm
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at the time of conception
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but have not been passed down
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generation through generation within the family.
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And we can actually use that strategy
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to now understand and to identify
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those genes causing autism in those individuals.
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So in fact, at the Simons Foundation,
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we took 2,600 individuals
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that had no family history of autism,
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and we took that child and their mother and father
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and used them to try and understand
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what were those genes
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causing autism in those cases?
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To do that, we actually had to comprehensively
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be able to look at all that genetic information
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and determine what those differences were
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between the mother, the father and the child.
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In doing so, I apologize,
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I'm going to use an outdated analogy
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of encyclopedias rather than Wikipedia,
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but I'm going to do so to try and help make the point
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that as we did this inventory,
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we needed to be able to look at
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massive amounts of information.
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Our genetic information is organized
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into a set of 46 volumes,
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and when we did that, we had to be able to account
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for each of those 46 volumes,
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because in some cases with autism,
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there's actually a single volume that's missing.
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We had to get more granular than that, though,
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and so we had to start opening those books,
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and in some cases, the genetic change
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was more subtle.
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It might have been a single paragraph that was missing,
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or yet, even more subtle than that,
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a single letter,
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one out of three billion letters
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that was changed, that was altered,
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yet had profound effects
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in terms of how the brain functions
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and affects behavior.
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In doing this within these families,
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we were able to account for approximately
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25 percent of the individuals
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and determine that there was a single
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powerful genetic factor
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that caused autism within those families.
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On the other hand, there's 75 percent
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that we still haven't figured out.
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As we did this, though,
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it was really quite humbling,
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because we realized that there was not simply
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one gene for autism.
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In fact, the current estimates are
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that there are 200 to 400 different genes
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that can cause autism.
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And that explains, in part,
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why we see such a broad spectrum
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in terms of its effects.
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Although there are that many genes,
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there is some method to the madness.
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It's not simply random
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200, 400 different genes,
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but in fact they fit together.
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They fit together in a pathway.
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They fit together in a network
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that's starting to make sense now
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in terms of how the brain functions.
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We're starting to have a bottom-up approach
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where we're identifying those genes,
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those proteins, those molecules,
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understanding how they interact together
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to make that neuron work,
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understanding how those neurons interact together
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to make circuits work,
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and understand how those circuits work
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to now control behavior,
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and understand that both in individuals with autism
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as well as individuals who have normal cognition.
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But early diagnosis is a key for us.
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Being able to make that diagnosis
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of someone who's susceptible
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at a time in a window
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where we have the ability to transform,
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to be able to impact
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that growing, developing brain is critical.
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And so folks like Ami Klin have developed methods
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to be able to take infants, small babies,
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and be able to use biomarkers,
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in this case eye contact and eye tracking,
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to identify an infant at risk.
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This particular infant, you can see,
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making very good eye contact with this woman
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as she's singing "Itsy, Bitsy Spider,"
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in fact is not going to develop autism.
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This baby we know is going to be in the clear.
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On the other hand, this other baby
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is going to go on to develop autism.
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In this particular child, you can see,
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it's not making good eye contact.
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Instead of the eyes focusing in
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and having that social connection,
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looking at the mouth, looking at the nose,
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looking off in another direction,
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but not again socially connecting,
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and being able to do this on a very large scale,
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screen infants, screen children for autism,
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through something very robust, very reliable,
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is going to be very helpful to us in terms of being
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able to intervene at an early stage
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when we can have the greatest impact.
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How are we going to intervene?
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It's probably going to be a combination of factors.
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In part, in some individuals,
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we're going to try and use medications.
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And so in fact, identifying the genes for autism
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is important for us
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to identify drug targets,
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to identify things that we might be able to impact
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and can be certain that that's really
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what we need to do in autism.
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But that's not going to be the only answer.
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Beyond just drugs, we're going to use educational strategies.
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Individuals with autism,
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some of them are wired a little bit differently.
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They learn in a different way.
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They absorb their surroundings in a different way,
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and we need to be able to educate them
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in a way that serves them best.
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Beyond that, there are a lot of individuals
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in this room who have great ideas
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in terms of new technologies we can use,
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everything from devices we can use to train the brain
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to be able to make it more efficient
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and to compensate for areas in which
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it has a little bit of trouble,
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to even things like Google Glass.
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You could imagine, for instance, Gabriel,
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with his social awkwardness,
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might be able to wear Google Glass
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with an earpiece in his ear,
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and have a coach be able to help him,
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be able to help think about conversations,
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conversation-starters,
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being able to even perhaps one day
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invite a girl out on a date.
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All of these new technologies
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just offer tremendous opportunities
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for us to be able to impact
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the individuals with autism,
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but yet we have a long way to go.
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As much as we know,
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there is so much more that we don't know,
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and so I invite all of you
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to be able to help us think about
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how to do this better,
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to use as a community our collective wisdom
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to be able to make a difference,
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and in particular,
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for the individuals in families with autism,
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I invite you to join the interactive autism network,
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to be part of the solution to this,
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because it's going to take really a lot of us
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to think about what's important,
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what's going to be a meaningful difference.
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As we think about something
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that's potentially a solution,
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how well does it work?
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Is it something that's really going to make a difference
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in your lives, as an individual,
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as a family with autism?
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We're going to need individuals of all ages,
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from the young to the old,
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and with all different shapes and sizes
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of the autism spectrum disorder
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to make sure that we can have an impact.
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So I invite all of you to join the mission
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and to help to be able to make the lives
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of individuals with autism
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so much better and so much richer.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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About this website

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