Facial asymmetry in parents of children on the autism spectrum

Document Type

Journal Article

Publication Title

Autism Research

Volume

14

Issue

11

First Page

2260

Last Page

2269

PubMed ID

34529361

Publisher

Wiley

School

School of Science

RAS ID

38914

Funders

National Health and Medical Research Council Telethon Kids Institute University of Western Australia

Grant Number

NHMRC Number : APP 1077966

Grant Link

http://purl.org/au-research/grants/nhmrc/1077966

Comments

Tan, D. W., Gilani, S. Z., Boutrus, M., Alvares, G. A., Whitehouse, A. J. O., Mian, A., . . . Maybery, M. T. (2021). Facial asymmetry in parents of children on the autism spectrum. Autism Research, 14(11), 2260-2269. https://doi.org/10.1002/aur.2612

Abstract

Greater facial asymmetry has been consistently found in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) relative to children without ASD. There is substantial evidence that both facial structure and the recurrence of ASD diagnosis are highly heritable within a nuclear family. Furthermore, sub-clinical levels of autistic-like behavioural characteristics have also been reported in first-degree relatives of individuals with ASD, commonly known as the ‘broad autism phenotype’. Therefore, the aim of the current study was to examine whether a broad autism phenotype expresses as facial asymmetry among 192 biological parents of autistic individuals (134 mothers) compared to those of 163 age-matched adults without a family history of ASD (113 females). Using dense surface-modelling techniques on three dimensional facial images, we found evidence for greater facial asymmetry in parents of autistic individuals compared to age-matched adults in the comparison group (p = 0.046, d = 0.21 [0.002, 0.42]). Considering previous findings and the current results, we conclude that facial asymmetry expressed in the facial morphology of autistic children may be related to heritability factors. Lay Abstract: In a previous study, we showed that autistic children presented with greater facial asymmetry than non-autistic children. In the current study, we examined the amount of facial asymmetry shown on three-dimensional facial images of 192 parents of autistic children compared to a control group consisting of 163 similarly aged adults with no known history of autism. Although parents did show greater levels of facial asymmetry than those in the control group, this effect is statistically small. We concluded that the facial asymmetry previously found in autistic children may be related to genetic factors.

DOI

10.1002/aur.2612

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