| Literature DB >> 28878697 |
Yong-Jiang Li1, Jian-Jun Ou2, Ya-Min Li3, Da-Xiong Xiang1.
Abstract
Autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) are a class of severe and chronic conditions and core symptoms are deficits in social interaction, language communication impairments, and repetitive/stereotyped behavior. Given the limitations of available treatments and substantially increased prevalence of the disease, additional interventions are needed. Since the use of dietary supplements for ASD is of high prevalence, up-to-date information about those supplements are required for both parents and clinicians. Relevant articles were identified through a systematic search of PubMed, EMBASE, Cochrane library, and PsychINFO databases (through May 2017). Current best evidences of 22 randomized controlled trials on 8 different dietary supplements for core symptoms of ASD were reviewed. For each supplement, this report focuses on the definition and potential therapeutic mechanisms, the latest advances, and discussion of study limitations and future directions. Most studies were small and short term, and there is little evidence to support effectiveness of dietary supplements for children with ASD.Entities:
Keywords: autism spectrum disorder; behavioral symptoms; dietary supplements; intervention; nutrition
Year: 2017 PMID: 28878697 PMCID: PMC5572332 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2017.00155
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Summary of published randomized controlled trials of dietary supplement interventions for ASD.
| Supplement | Reference | Study design | Subjects ( | Intervention doses and duration | Behavior outcome measure | Primary results | Serious adverse effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vitamin B12 | Bertoglio et al. ( | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover | 30 (93%), 3–8 | 64.5 µg/kg injection, every third day, crossover 6 weeks | PIA-CV, CGI-I, CARS, PPVT-III, Stanford Binet Fifth Edition Routing Subsets, ABC, CBCL, and MCDI | Better CGI-I score, no significant improvement in other measures | None |
| Hendren et al. ( | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 57 (79%), 3–7 | 75 µg/kg injection, every third day, 8 weeks | CGI-I, ABC, SRS | Better CGI-I score, no improvement in ABC and SRS | None | |
| Vitamin D3 | Saad et al. ( | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 109 (78%), 3–10 | 300 IU vitamin D3/kg/day, 4 months | ABC, CARS, ATEC, SRS | Significant improvements in all measures | None |
| Omega-3 fatty acid | Amminger et al. ( | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 13 (100%), 5–17 | 840 mg/day EPA + 700 mg/day DHA, 6 weeks | ABC | No significant improvement in ABC | None |
| Yui et al. ( | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 13 (92%), 6–28 | 120 or 240 mg/day ARA + 120 or 240 mg/day DHA, 16 weeks | ABC, ADI-R, SRS | Significant improvement in all measures | None | |
| Bent et al. ( | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 27 (89%), 3–8 | 0.7 g/day EPA + 0.46 g/day DHA, 12 weeks | ABC PPVT EVT BASC, SRS CGI-S | No significant differences in all measures | None | |
| Bent et al. ( | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 57 (88%), 5–8 | 0.7 g/day EPA + 0.46 g/day DHA, 12 weeks | ABC, SRS, CGI-I | Significant improvement in stereotypy and lethargy subscales of ABC, no significant differences in other measures | None | |
| Voigt et al. ( | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 48 (83%), 3–10 | 200 mg/day DHA, 6 months | CGI-I, ABC, CDI, BASC | No significant improvement in CGI-I across groups and in all other measures across groups | None | |
| Mankad et al. ( | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 37 (73%), 2–5 | 1.5 g/day EPA + DHA, 6 months | PDDBI, BASC-2, CGI-I, VABS-II, PLS-4 | No significant improvement in all measures | None | |
| Probiotic and digestive enzyme | Munasinghe et al. ( | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover | 43 (84%), 3–8 | Proteolytic enzymes: two caps per meal, max 9 caps, crossover 3 months | GBRS | No significant improvement in all measures | None |
| Parracho et al. ( | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover | 22 (91%), 4–16 | Probiotics: 4.5 × 1010 CFU/day, crossover 6 weeks | DBC, TBPS | Significant improvement in TBPS, no improvement in DBC | None | |
| Saad et al. ( | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 101(81%), 3–9 | Digestive enzyme, 3 months | CARS, GBRS | Significant improvement in in emotional response, general impression autistic score of CARS, and in general behavior and gastrointestinal symptoms of GBRS | None | |
| Folinic acid | Frye et al. ( | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 48 (82%), mean 7.3 | Folinic acid: 2 mg/kg/day, max 50 mg, 12 weeks | CELF-preschool-2, CELF-4, PLS-5, OACIS, VABS, ABC, SRS, BASC, AIM, ASQ | Significant improvement in verbal communication, VABS, ABC, ASQ, BASC, and better for FRAA positive participants | None |
| Camel milk | Bashir and Al-Ayadhi ( | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 45 (89%), 2–12 | 500 ml/day, 2 weeks | CARS | Significant improvement in CARS in raw camel milk group | None |
| Sulforaphane | Singh et al. ( | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 29 (100%), 13–27 | 50–150 μmol/day, 18 weeks | ABC, SRS, CGI-I, OACIS | Significant improvement in all measures | None |
| GFCF diet | Elder et al. ( | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover | 15 (80%), 2–16 | GFCF diet, crossover 6 weeks | CARS, ECO | No significant improvement in all measures | None |
| Whiteley et al. ( | Single-blind | 72 (89%), 4–10 | GFCF diet, 12 months | ADOS, GARS, VABS, ADHD-IV | No significant improvement in all measures | None | |
| Knivsberg et al. ( | Single-blind | 20, mean 7.4 | GFCF diet, 12 months | DIPAB | Significant improvement in DIPAB | Not reported | |
| Johnson et al. ( | Single-blind, placebo-controlled | 22 (82%), 3–5 | GFCF diet, 3 months | Mullen scales of early learning AGS edition, CBCL, direct behavior observation measure | No significant improvement in all measures | None | |
| Hyman et al. ( | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 14 (86%), 3–5 | GFCF diet, 12 weeks | RFRLRS, Conner’s Abbreviated Rating Scale | No significant improvement in all measures | None | |
| Gluten and casein supplementation | Pusponegoro et al. ( | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 50 (88%), 3–7 | 11 g of gluten and 12 g of casein, 1 weeks | AWPC, PDDBI | No significant improvement in all measures | None |
ABC, aberrant behavior checklist; ADI-R, Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised; ADOS, Autism Diagnostic Observation Scale; AWPC, approach withdrawal problems composite; ADHD-IV, Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder-IV Scale; AIM, autism impact measure; ASQ, Autism Symptoms Questionnaire; ATEC, Autism Treatment Evaluation Checklist; BASC, Behavior Assessment Scale for Children; CBCL, Child Behavior Checklist; CDI, Child Development Inventory; CARS, Childhood Autism Rating Scale; CELF, Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals; CGI-I, Clinical Global Impression Scale of Improvement; DBC, Development Behavior Checklist; DIPAB, Diagnose of Psykotisk Adfaerd hosBørn (Diagnosis of Psychotic Behavior in Children); ECO, Ecological Communication Orientation; EVT, Expressive Vocabulary Test; FRAA, folate receptor-α autoantibody; GARS, Gilliam Autism Rating Scale; GBRS, Global Behavior Rating Scale; MCDI, MacArthur Communication Developmental Inventory; OACIS, Ohio Autism Clinical Impression Scale; PIA-CV, Parent Interview for Autism-Clinical Version; PPVT, Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test; PPVT-III, Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test-Third Edition; PDDBI, Pervasive Developmental Disorders Behavioral Inventory; PLS, Preschool Language Scale; RFRLRS, Ritvo-Freeman Real Life Rating Scales; SRS, Social Responsiveness Scale; TBPS, Total Behavior Problem Score; VABS, Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scale; GFCF, gluten-free and casein-free; ARA, arachidonic acid; DHA, docosahexaenoic acid; EPA, eicosapentaenoic acid.
Figure 1Flow diagram of the study selection process.
Summary of evidence and recommendations.
| Supplement | Number of evidence | Rationale/mechanism | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Methyl B12 | 2 double-blind RCTs | Correct deficiency | Effectiveness inconclusive but acceptable |
| Vitamin D | 1 double-blind RCT | Correct deficiency | Promising |
| Omega-3 fatty acids | 6 double-blind RCTs | Correct deficiency | Less effective but acceptable |
| Probiotic and digestive enzyme | 3 double-blind RCTs | Ease GI symptoms | Promising |
| Folinic acid | 1 double-blind RCT | Correct deficiency | Promising |
| Camel milk | 1 double-blind RCT | Improve immune function | Promising |
| Ease GI symptoms | |||
| Sulforaphane | 1 double-blind RCT | Fever effect | Promising |
| Gluten-free and casein-free diet | 5 double-blind RCTs | Decrease exogenous neuropeptides | Not recommend |
GI, gastrointestinal; RCT, randomized controlled trial.