FDA Drug Approval Marks a First for a Disease — But It’s Not Autism
Frank Vinluan / medcitynews - Leucovorin is now approved for cerebral folate deficiency months after FDA Commissioner Marty Makary claimed the decades-old generic drug had promise for treating autism. The FDA’s review was based on published literature and real-world evidence.The post …
AI Summary: The FDA has granted traditional approval to leucovorin for cerebral folate deficiency, formalizing a decades‑old generic’s role in a rare metabolic disorder. The decision comes amid earlier agency notes that evidence for autism benefit was weak and debate over expanding use without fresh trial data — cue the policy hot takes.
As some people push to make profound autism its own diagnosis, this family is raising twins with it
medicalxpress - Connor Murphy walked in circles around his dad, then flopped down on the kitchen floor, got up and walked in circles again.
AI Summary: In a candid portrait, parents caring for twins with severe developmental differences describe daily realities—stereotyped behaviors like pacing and collapse—while advocacy grows to recognize "profound autism" as a distinct diagnosis. Families say a separate label could unlock tailored services and protections, but critics warn of stigma and diagnostic fragmentation; labels aren't magic wands.
No Link Between Acetaminophen in Pregnancy and Autism, a New Study Finds
Azeen Ghorayshi / nytimes - The review looked at more than three dozen studies and found no evidence that acetaminophen increased the risk of neurodevelopmental disorders in children.
AI Summary: A new comprehensive review of more than three dozen studies found no evidence that taking acetaminophen during pregnancy increases the risk of neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism, ADHD or intellectual disabilities. Despite lingering public anxiety and the occasional skeptical quip, expectant mothers can take a breath of relief.
Healthcare groups decry CDC messaging change on autism and vaccines
Mackenzie Bean / beckershospitalreview - Healthcare associations are raising concerns after the CDC this week removed messaging from its website stating that vaccines do not cause autism. The agency updated its webpage on vaccines and autism Nov. 19. Previously, the page said research has shown …
AI Summary: Recent modifications to the CDC’s online vaccine safety pages have alarmed healthcare groups, who contend that altered messaging risks bolstering discredited claims linking vaccines and autism. Critics warn that the move may destabilize public confidence in decades of robust, evidence‐based vaccine research.