AI Article Synopsis

  • Prenatal testosterone (pT) plays a key role in the development of masculine traits, with past research linking it to autistic traits in childhood, but adolescent effects remain unexplored.
  • This study analyzed a sample of 97 adolescents and young adults to see how pT relates to autistic traits, using amniotic fluid samples for pT levels and parent/self-reports for measuring autistic traits.
  • Results showed no direct link between pT and autistic traits in the overall adolescent group, but indicated a positive correlation in those with earlier puberty onset, especially in males and concerning social traits, highlighting the need for further research.

Article Abstract

Prenatal testosterone (pT) is a crucial component in physiological masculinization in humans. In line with the Prenatal Sex Steroid Theory of autism, some studies have found a positive correlation between pT and autistic traits in childhood. However, effects in adolescence have not been explored. Hormonal and environmental changes occurring during puberty may alter the strength or the nature of prenatal effects on autistic traits. The current study examines if pT relates to autistic traits in a non-clinical sample of adolescents and young adults (N = 97, 170 observations; age 13-21 years old). It also explores pT interactions with pubertal stage and timing. PT concentrations were measured from amniotic fluid extracted in the 2nd trimester of gestation via amniocentesis conducted for clinical purposes. Autistic traits were measured by self- and parent-reports on the Autism Spectrum Quotient (AQ) which provides a total score and 5 sub-scores (social skills, communication, imagination, attention switching and attention to detail). Self-reported pubertal stage was regressed on age to provide a measure of relative timing. We found no statistical evidence for a direct association between pT and autistic traits in this adolescent sample (males, females or full sample). Exploratory analyses suggested that pT correlated positively with autistic traits in adolescents with earlier puberty-onset, but statistical robustness of this finding was limited. Further exploratory post-hoc tests suggested the pT-by-pubertal timing interaction was stronger in males relative to females, in self-reported compared to parent-reported AQ and specifically for social traits. These findings require replication in larger samples. Findings have implications for understanding the effects of pT on human behavior, specifically existence of effects in adolescence.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8783053PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psyneuen.2021.105623DOI Listing

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