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Considering Biomedical and Alternative Treatments for Autism

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Title: Considering Biomedical and Alternative Treatments for Autism


1
Considering Biomedical and Alternative Treatments
for Autism
  • Robert L. Hendren, DO
  • Professor of Psychiatry
  • Exec. Director, M.I.N.D. Institute
  • Chief, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
  • UC Davis

2
Evidence-Based Intervention Strategies
  • Behavioral - ABA (Applied Behavioral Analysis)
  • TEACCH (Treatment, Education of Autistic
    Communication Handicapped Children)
  • Pivotal Response Training (Koegel)
  • Incidental Teaching Approach
  • Developmental, Individual-Difference
    Relationship-Based model (Greenspan)

3
Less Evidence-Based Educational Interventions for
ASD and LD
  • Lindamood-Bell
  • - develop sensory cognitive processes
  • - concept symbol imagery, visual motor
  • skills
  • Daily Life Therapy
  • - Higashi School in Japan
  • - Self esteem, exercise, rhythm, music, arts

4
Less Evidence-Based Interventions for ASD and LD
  • Computer Programs
  • Fast ForWord - slows sounds then speeds up
  • Earobics - auditory attention, phenomic id and
    awareness.
  • Train Time - receptive expressive language and
    attention
  • Facilitated communication - supports typing at
    keyboard

5
Less Evidence-Based Interventions for ASD and LD
  • Speech Language Therapy
  • PECS (Picture Exchange Communication System)
  • Communication books
  • Augmentative Communication Devices

6
Less Evidence-Based Treatments for Behavioral
Disorders in Children
  • Melatonin for sleep
  • Atypical antipsychotics
  • SSRIs
  • Creatin (apraxic language)

7
Anecdotal Evidence-Based Non-Biological
Interventions for ASD and LD
  • Auditory Integration Training
  • Bernard Method - dampen hypersensitive
    frequencies
  • Tomatis Method Mozart and Gregorian chants as
    sound stimulation
  • SAMONAS - classical music and sounds of nature
  • Rhythmic Entertainment Intervention - drum beats
  • Music Therapy

8
Anecdotal Evidence-Based Interventions for ASD
and LD
  • Doman/Delacato Method - normalize sensory
    system
  • Craniosacral Therapy - free restrictions of
    motion and normalize rhythm
  • Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy regenerate neurons
    (series of 3 cases Rossignol, 2006 one small
    double-blind placebo controlled study)
  • EEG Biofeedback correct EEG abnormalities

9
What Causes Autism?
  • First hit - Genetic neurodevelopmental
    vulnerability
  • Second hit - environmental toxicant or
    stressor plus compromised immune system
  • Third hit - Restricted development

10
Biomedical Approach to Autism
  • Is autism a disease of the brain or a disease of
    the bodys metabolism that affects the brain?
  • Seizures
  • GI symptoms
  • Regressive autism
  • Is autism caused by environmental stressors plus
    immune deficiency?

11
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12
Types of Biomedical/CAM (modified from Levy
Hyman 2003, 2007)
  • Neurotransmitter production or release (DMG,
    B6/Mg, Vit C, Omega 3, St. Johns Wort)
  • Food Sensitivities and Gastrointestinal Function
    (GF/CF, Secretin, digestive enzymes, Pepcid,
    antibiotics)
  • Putative immune mechanism or modulators
    (antifungals, IV Ig, vit A/Cod liver oil)
  • Potential heavy metal toxin removal (chelation,
    DMSA or DMRA)
  • Methylation (methylcobalamine, folinic acid)
  • Non-biological (craniosacral manipulation,
    transcranial magnetic stimulation)

13
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14
M.I.N.D. Translational Model -Mechanisms and
Trajectories
  • Immune function and strengthening
  • Oxidative stress assessment and correction
  • Inflammatory processes assessment and reduction
  • Nutritional assessment and correction
  • Early targeted behavioral intervention

15
Current Translational Research at the M.I.N.D.
Institute
  • Immunology Oral IgG, Actos
  • Oxidative Stress - Methyl B12
  • Inflammation HBOT
  • Lipid metabolism - Omega 3 fatty acid
  • Behavioral/ mirror neurons early intervention
  • Biomarkers - Pharmacogenetics and genomics,
    cytokines, MRI

16
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17
B6 / Magnesium
  • Rationale
  • Proposed to effect the folinic acid pathway and
    increase glutathione. Many people with autism are
    reported to have impaired metabolism of
    adenosylhomocysteine, adenosine, and
    methylcobalamin, such that homocysteine formation
    and methionine synthase processes are deficient.
  • Evidence
  • Twenty-two studies are reported by Rimland, some
    controlled, on use of pyridoxine or pyridoxine
    with pyridoxal 5-phospate in autism. Twenty-one
    had positive outcomes. Those that used magnesium
    in conjunction had the most positive outcomes.
    However, one double-blind, placebo controlled
    study with 10 children was negative (Findling,
    1997).
  • May work better in adults.

18
B6 / Magnesium
  • Procedure
  • 30mg/kg per day of B6 and 10mg/kg per day of Mg
    but maybe low
  • Greater clinical improvement is realized by
    successful treatment with (injectible)
    methylcobalamin or oral trimethlglycine
    (betaine).
  • Safety
  • Excessive doses of B6 may cause peripheral
    neuropathy and Mg may cause arrhythmia. Increased
    hyperactivity to the point of hypomania is
    reported.
  • Promise
  • Recent Cochrane review concluded studies not
    adequate to comment on efficacy (Nye, 2002).
    Meta-analysis of 12 studies suggest it may be a
    promising adjunct (Pfeiffer, 1995) but there
    are no recent studies.

19
Folinic Acid
  • Rationale
  • Folates are involved in the synthesis of
    neucleotides from purines, indirectly with
    synthesis of transfer RNA and as methyl donor to
    create methylcobalamin. Folinic acid is more
    metabolically active (Kelly, 1998).
  • Evidence
  • One case report (Moretti, 2005)
  • Procedure
  • Not recommended to be used alone. Suggested as
    add on to methylcobalimine (James, 2004). 400-800
    mcg twice a day
  • Safety
  • Promise

20
Vitamin A / Cod Liver Oil
  • Rationale facilitates immune response by
    modulation of G-protein function in cell membrane
  • Evidence
  • Anecdotal reports are positive (Megson, 2000)
    and an older, double-blind study reported
    improved sensory motor scores (Heeley, 1996)
  • Procedure
  • Safety Toxicities include pseudotumor cerbri,
    skin rash, and hepatomeglia
  • Promise

21
Omega 3 Fatty Acids (DHA)
  • Rationale
  • Low levels reported in autism and other
    disorders (ADHD, Tourettes, Bipolar).
    Antioxidant that helps with immune regulation.
    May affect neurotransmitters and prostaglandins
  • Evidence none for autism but some for ADHD,
    Tourettes and Bipolar
  • Procedure
  • Low dose of no benefit.
  • Often combined with cod liver oil.
  • Suppliers Eskimo 3, Nordic naturals, Omega
    Brite, Vital nutrients, Omega 6 has lowest
    mercury and less fish taste.
  • Safety No known side effects

22
Casein-Free, Gluten-Free Diet
  • Rationale
  • Protein breakdown products from milk
    (casomorphin) and grains (gliadomorphin) cause
    inflammation in the stomach and gut, allowing
    leakage of opioid-like compounds, altering
    immunity and inhibiting CNS maturation.
  • Evidence
  • Modest evidence for opioid theory based on GI
    symptoms and celiac disease.
  • Debate about whether children with autism have
    more GI symptoms than typically developing
    children.
  • Evidence that children with autism have altered
    immunity.

23
Casein-Free, Gluten-Free Diet
  • Evidence (Cont.)
  • May need to be on diet for at least 8 months to
    see benefit.
  • Treatment results inconsistent
  • Recent review found only one small study
    demonstrating benefit for a select group was
    reliable (Millward, 2004 Knivsberg, 2002).
  • Parent reports to ARI various gluten, casein and
    gluten casein restricted diets help 46-63 of
    individuals with autism, with 2-4 reporting
    worsening of behaviors.
  • Procedure
  • Very difficult to implement due to limitations
    in foods and taste

24
Other Dietary Modification
  • Rationale
  • Lactose intolerance per lactase deficiency as
    reported by Kushak and Buie, Mass General
    Childrens Hospital.
  • Maltose intolerance- Kushak and Buie
  • Sucrose-isomaltose (and palatinose) intolerance
    Kushak and Buie.
  • Safety for all Dietary Modification
  • Dietary inadequacy (calcium, vitamin D, protein)
    if restrictions not balanced. Often requires
    strong motivation from parents.
  • Promise
  • It may be that subgroups of children have
    sensitivity. Trial should be considered with
    motivated parents.

25
Secretin
  • Rationale vasoactive gut peptide
  • Evidence
  • Initial report of benefit in three cases
    (Horvath, 1998)
  • No reports of group or individual effects to
    support the efficacy. Families may choose to
    continue Secretin even when notified their child
    did not receive the treatment in a blinded study.
  • Procedure Multiple IV Secretin treatments
  • Safety No known risks
  • Promise Maybe for a very select group

26
Digestive Enzymes
  • Rationale
  • Based on a gut-brain connection associated with
    autism (Reichelt, 1981 Horvath, 1999 Wakefield,
    2002). Use of a comprehensive digestive enzyme
    with meals to aid digestion of all exorphin
    peptides and disaccharides.
  • Evidence
  • No published reports.
  • Through not tabulated by ARI, usage trials by
    Kirkman Labs and Klaire Labs resulted in 40-60
    of tested children showing improvement
    worsening (beyond a 10-day period) occurred in
    about one in 40 (2.5).
  • Proposed to improve self-stimulation and
    stereotypies, aggression, GI symptoms,
    socialization, and hyperactivity.

27
Digestive Enzymes
  • Procedure
  • Plant derived enzymes may be best, but animal
    derived enzymes are more accepted. Labs who make
    these are Klaire, Kirkman, ITI and Houston.
  • Amount of digestive enzymes to be taken depends
    on the size and content of the meal, not the
    subjects size or weight. Only one enzyme complex
    has isomaltase-palatinase activity as well as
    peptidases, amylases, and other disaccharidases
    (Kirkman Laboratories). Other enzyme
    formulations contain the requisite peptidases
    (including DPP4), amylase, and some
    disaccharidases.
  • Safety
  • Not an invasive modality as it only requires
    swallowing one or two capsules (or opened capsule
    contents) at the beginning of each meal.
  • Exorphin withdrawal and dysbiotic flora die off
    periods can occur with all digestive aids in some
    individuals with autism.
  • Ulceration and gastritis is reported.
  • Promise
  • Difficult to predict who will respond favorably
    or not. Easy to do and relatively safe.

28
Antibiotics, Probiotics
  • Rationale
  • Individuals with autism are reported to have
    more bacterial dysbiosis in the intestinal tract
    and mouth/throat than controls. Antibiotics may
    worsen or improve ASD (Manev, 2001)
  • Evidence
  • One small, poorly designed study suggested
    transient benefit for 8 out of 10 children with
    regressive autism with vancomycin (Sandler et
    al., 2000)
  • Testimonial evidence - coordinated use of
    probiotics significantly increases clinical
    success in normalizing gut flora (Brudnak, 2002).
  • Safety - Superinfection or resistance with
    long-term use of antibiotics.

29
Antifungals
  • Rationale
  • Too much Candida in sensitive individuals.
    However, excessive yeast/fungal overgrowths have
    not been found. Improvements are reported with
    antifungals even with no overgrowth (Shaw et al.,
    1995) leading some to say it is something in the
    medication rather than the yeast killing
    properties that is of benefit.
  • Evidence
  • According to ARI report, use of antifungals
    helps up to 51 (Diflucan, n215) with lower
    success percentages for other antifungals and
    some antibiotics. Adverse reactions or worsening
    are 5-7 for antifungals and higher for
    antibiotics.
  • Safety
  • Superinfection or resistance with long-term use
    of antifungals.

30
Intravenous Immunoglobin G
  • Rationale ASD and immune dysfunction
    (Zimmerman, 2000 Krause, 2002)
  • Evidence growing for immune dysfunction
    (Croonenberghs, 2002)
  • Subjective improvement in open trials (Gupta,
    1996 Wank, 2002). One negative open study
    (DelGiudice-Asch, 1999)
  • Procedure IV IG
  • Safety small risk for aseptic meningitis,
    renal failure or infection
  • Promise

31
Heavy Metal Chelation (DMSA, DMRA)
  • Rationale
  • The treatment is targeted at tissue-sequestered
    mercury based on lead and other heavy metal
    detoxification.
  • Evidence
  • None found in literature. Of all the drug, diet,
    and nutritional therapies listed on the ARI
    Survey, detoxification is reported to help the
    highest percentage of individuals with autism
    (71) and it worsened only 3, the second
    lowest percentage.
  • Procedure
  • Detoxification involves courses of oral DMSA
    (2,3 dimercaptosuccinic acid) with periodic
    elemental analysis of urine from subjects and
    controls.
  • To be successful, detoxification treatment
    requires two prerequisite treatments that must be
    successful clearing the gut of harmful
    dysbiotic flora, and bolstering metabolism with
    essential nutrients so that the individual can
    tolerate detoxification.
  • Screen for precursors and seizures.
  • Supplement for zinc deficiency and cistine.

32
Heavy Metal Chelation (DMSA, DMRA)
  • Safety
  • It is controversial, and the IOM recently warned
    of unspecified risks. Renal and hepatic
    toxicity is possible with oral agents. Most
    common side effects are diarrhea and fatigue.
    Less common side effects include abnormal CBC,
    LFTs and mineral abnormalities. Seizures have
    also been reported. Reports of sulfer smell,
    regression, GI symptoms and rash
  • Promise
  • While it was felt to be a helpful treatment by
    skilled practitioners, it is very complicated and
    was felt to be too complicated for an
    experimental study. An open label study is being
    developed at ASU. See ARI website for discussion
    and protocol.

33
Methylcobalamine (methyl B12)
  • Evidence
  • James (2004) reports abnormal methylation in
    children with autism normalized with methyl B12
    but not clinical rating were done.
  • Various clinicians report improvement in 40 to
    90 of individuals.
  • Procedure
  • Administered subcutaneously in the buttocks at a
    dosage of 64.5 mg/kg every 3 days for 6 weeks
    (Hopewell and Wellness Labs)
  • Safety
  • Minor trauma from SubQ injections
  • Promise
  • Ranked 1 by the group as holding promise and
    lending itself to a clinical trial. Clinical
    trial at MIND Institute for children 2 to 7.

34
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35
Subject Enrollment Status
72 (21/29) Chose to Enter the Extension Study
36
Group Response CARS
Lower Scores Indicate Improvement
37
Group Response SBV
Higher Scores Indicate Improvement
38
Group Response ABC
Lower Scores Indicate Improvement
39
Responder Subgroup
Subgroup of 9 (31) Responders to Behavioral
Measures Responder Subgroup Also Showed
Significantly Improved Plasma Glutathione
Responder classification based on clinically
significant improvement on the CGI and at least
two additional behavioral measures. Clinical
significance on these measures was determined by
an improvement of at least 1 point on the CGI, 10
points on the PIA-CV and CBCL, 5 points on the
PPVT, MCDI, and ABC, and 2 points on the CARS.
40
Responder Subgroup CGI
Lower Scores Indicate Improvement
41
Blood Analysis in Responders
  • Plasma GSH/GSSG in responder subgroup
  • p0.097 for baseline compared to placebo
  • p0.002 for baseline compared to active
  • p0.025 for active compared to placebo
  • Plasma GSH in responder subgroup
  • p0.311 for baseline compared to placebo
  • p0.002 for baseline compared to active
  • p0.002 for active compared to placebo

42
Others
  • Pepcid (famotidine) H-2 antagonist 3
    children improved in double-blind trial (Linday)
  • Rivastigmine cholinesterase inhibitor improves
    language and behavior in open label study (Chez,
    2004)
  • Galantamine may enhance expressive language in
    adults with ASD (Hertzman, 2003)
  • Memantine (Nemenda) glutamate receptor, used
    of Alzheimers
  • Transsulferation - Abnormalities of
    sulfoxidation and sulfation affecting the
    stability of catecholamine neurotransmitters,
    impairing integrity of gut wall and heightening
    sensitivity to pollutants.
  • Creatin
  • Valtrex (acyclovar) antiviral or effect on
    purine

43
Pharmacogenomics of Risperdal Tx (Hendren Sharp)
Preliminary Data
44
Biomedical Treatments (Adams JB, ARI, 2007)
  • Improve diet
  • Food allergies
  • GF/CF diet
  • Vitamin/Mineral Supplements (Adams 2004)
  • Essential Fatty Acids (Amminger, 2006)

45
Biomedical Treatments (cont)
  • Gut Treatments antifungals, probiotics,
    digestive enzymes
  • Amino acids, Melatonin, Thyroid supplements,
    sulfation
  • Glutathione, methyl B12
  • Chelation
  • Immune system regulation (IVIG, Actos, LD
    Naltrexone)

46
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