Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10963181 | Vaccine | 2016 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
A contentious theory espoused by some parents is that regressive-onset of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is triggered by vaccines. If this were true, then vaccine receipt should be higher in children with regressive-onset ASD compared with other patterns of onset. Parental report of rate of receipt for six vaccines (DPT/DTaP, HepB, Hib, polio, MMR, varicella) was examined in children with ASD (NÂ =Â 2755) who were categorized by pattern of ASD onset (early onset, plateau, delay-plus-regression, regression). All pairwise comparisons were significantly equivalent within a 10% margin for all vaccines except varicella, for which the delay-plus-regression group had lower rates of receipt (81%) than the early-onset (87%) and regression (87%) groups. Findings do not support a connection between regressive-onset ASD and vaccines in this cohort.
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Authors
Robin P. Goin-Kochel, Sarah S. Mire, Allison G. Dempsey, Rachel H. Fein, Danielle Guffey, Charles G. Minard, Rachel M. Cunningham, Leila C. Sahni, Julie A. Boom,