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    You are at:Home»Technology»US autism research gets $50 million funding boost — amid row over Tylenol
    Technology

    US autism research gets $50 million funding boost — amid row over Tylenol

    Earth & BeyondBy Earth & BeyondSeptember 28, 2025004 Mins Read
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    US autism research gets  million funding boost — amid row over Tylenol
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    An anonymous pregnant woman wearing a short burgundy dress sits on the floor propped up against some pillows during a pre-birth class

    Autism research funded by a new US initiative includes study of environmental exposures during pregnancy. Credit: Diana Bagnoli/Getty

    Scientists moved a step closer to understanding the complex causes of autism this week. Although all of the headlines went to US President Donald Trump’s poorly evidenced statements that the painkiller acetaminophen is linked to the neurodevelopmental condition, his White House autism event brought welcome — and largely overlooked — news to scientists: the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) is investing US$50 million in an unusual autism-research effort.

    Trump and Jayanta Bhattacharya, director of the NIH, announced on 22 September that 13 research groups will receive funding under the Autism Data Science Initiative (ADSI), a Trump administration programme to fund studies that explore how interacting genetic and environmental factors contribute to autism. “This is where the field needs to be going in searching for the complex causes of autism,” says Helen Tager-Flusberg, who studies autism at Boston University, Massachusetts.

    Trump team backs an unproven drug for autism — but does it work?

    The funded projects range from studies on environmental exposures during pregnancy to experiments on brain cells. Funding was also awarded to efforts to replicate the projects’ results and so ensure that they are robust.

    Researchers, although pleased by the aims of the funded work and the rigour of the methods, have some concerns about the project. Several ADSI-funding recipients say that they are expected to complete their projects relatively quickly — within three years instead of the usual five — and some say that they are alert to political interference with their results. Trump prompted fierce pushback from scientists with his statements about acetaminophen earlier this week, given the lack of convincing evidence to support a link with autism. “We should wait until the research happens before announcing an answer,” says Jason Stein, a neuroscientist at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, who received an ADSI grant.

    “This is not political interference, but rather a bold, science-driven effort to deliver meaningful answers more quickly,” said a spokesperson for the US Department of Health and Human Services (HSS), which oversees the NIH.

    Quick turnaround

    The NIH announced the ADSI in May and invited researchers to submit grant applications for research into the causes of autism, its growing prevalence and potential interventions. Some researchers expressed concern that applicants had only a month to submit proposals — much less time than usual — and it was unclear who was reviewing the grants and with what criteria. Some worried that the funding would be channelled to researching the discredited idea promoted by Trump’s health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr that vaccines are linked to autism. “Some people thought: maybe we should steer clear of this,” says Judith Miller, a psychologist who studies autism at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia in Pennsylvania.

    In the end, nearly 250 research teams applied, and no awards were granted to projects that focus explictly on autism and vaccines.

    Several of the projects will involve exposomics: the study of the array of environmental factors to which a person is exposed. Miller is leading a three-year, $4.3-million project combining genome and exposome data to seek factors associated with autism. The project will draw on previously collected data on more than 100,000 children, including about 4,000 autistic children, and connect those to maternal-health records. The research team plans to use information on where participants live to add in data on air quality, access to green spaces and other environmental markers. “We haven’t been able to bring this type of data all together in a clinical population,” before, Miller says.

    Replication requirement

    Stein and his team, by contrast, are examining autism using brain organoids grown from the stem cells of autistic and non-autistic children. The researchers plan to expose the tissue to substances that epidemiological studies have linked to autism — such as valproic acid, a drug used to treat epilepsy — and examine how this affects gene activity.

    Trump links autism and Tylenol: is there any truth to it?

    Autism boost Funding Million research row Tylenol
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