| Literature DB >> 32355335 |
Laurent Mottron1, Danilo Bzdok2,3.
Abstract
The current diagnostic practices are linked to a 20-fold increase in the reported prevalence of ASD over the last 30 years. Fragmenting the autism phenotype into dimensional "autistic traits" results in the alleged recognition of autism-like symptoms in any psychiatric or neurodevelopemental condition and in individuals decreasingly distant from the typical population, and prematurely dismisses the relevance of a diagnostic threshold. Non-specific socio-communicative and repetitive DSM 5 criteria, combined with four quantitative specifiers as well as all their possible combinations, render limitless variety of presentations consistent with the categorical diagnosis of ASD. We propose several remedies to this problem: maintain a line of research on prototypical autism; limit the heterogeneity compatible with a categorical diagnosis to situations with a phenotypic overlap and a validated etiological link with prototypical autism; reintroduce the qualitative properties of autism presentations and of current dimensional specifiers, language, intelligence, comorbidity, and severity in the criteria used to diagnose autism in replacement of quantitative "social" and "repetitive" criteria; use these qualitative features combined with the clinical intuition of experts and machine-learning algorithms to differentiate coherent subgroups in today's autism spectrum; study these subgroups separately, and then compare them; and question the autistic nature of "autistic traits".Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32355335 PMCID: PMC7714694 DOI: 10.1038/s41380-020-0748-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Psychiatry ISSN: 1359-4184 Impact factor: 15.992
Fig. 1Temporal trends in autism research.
a The change in autism prevalence over time, based on data from [65–67]. Methodologies may differ between studies. b The changes in group-level standardized mean differences between autism and control samples over time, as described by Rødgaard et al. (2019) [14]. A significant downwards temporal trend was observed in five of seven investigated constructs in autism. c The number of published studies investigating autistic traits in the normal population and for other clinical conditions, showing an eightfold increase during the last decade. d The number of published empirical studies performing research on autism, showing a fourfold increase during the last decade. (“c”,“d” source: Pubmed).