Ja. Kaye et al., Mumps, measles, and rubella vaccine and the incidence of autism recorded by general practitioners: a time trend analysis, BR MED J, 322(7284), 2001, pp. 460-463
Citations number
6
Categorie Soggetti
General & Internal Medicine","Medical Research General Topics
Objective To estimate changes in the risk of autism and assess the relation
of autism to the mumps, measles, and rubella (MMR) vaccine.
Design Time trend analysis of data from the UK general practice research da
tabase (GPRD).
Setting General practices in the United Kingdom.
Subjects Children aged 12 years or younger diagnosed with autism 1988-99, w
ith further analysis of boys aged 2 to 5 years born 1988-93.
Main outcome measures Annual and age specific incidence for first recorded
diagnoses of autism (that is, when the diagnosis of autism was first record
ed) in the children aged 12 years or younger; annual, birth cohort specific
risk of autism diagnosed in the 2 to 5 year old boys; coverage (prevalence
) of MMR vaccination in the same birth cohorts.
Results The incidence of newly diagnosed autism increased sevenfold, from 0
.3 per 10 000 person years in 1988 to 2.1 per 10 000 person years in 1999,
The peak incidence was among 3 and 4 year olds, and 83% (254/305) of cases
were boys. In an annual birth cohort analysis of 114 boys born in 1988-93,
the risk of autism in 2 to 5 year old boys increased nearly fourfold over t
ime, from 8 (95% confidence interval 4 to 14) per 10 000 for boys born in 1
988 to 29 (20 to 43) per 10 000 for boys born in 1993. For the same annual
birth cohorts the prevalence of MMR vaccination was over 95%.
Conclusions Because the incidence of autism among 2 to 5 year olds increase
d markedly among boys born in each year separately from 1988 to 1993 while
MMR vaccine coverage was over 95% for successive annual birth cohorts, the
data provide evidence that no correlation exists between the prevalence of
MMR vaccination and the rapid increase in the risk of autism over time. The
explanation for the marked increase in risk of the diagnosis of autism in
the past decade remains uncertain.