As we have
seen at various points in this blog, there is mounting evidence to support the
use of steroids in autism, particularly in regressive autism.
Since long-term steroid use has side effects, there have been no large long-term
trials. There is plenty of anecdotal
evidence, particularly from the US. We
saw a paper on Immunomodulatory Therapy, by Michael Chez, which discussed the
benefits of Prednisone, a very cheap oral steroid.
In the days
before inhalers for asthma, it was low dose oral prednisone that kept many sufferers
from an early death. It did result in
reduced height, but this is probably a price worth paying to stay alive.
A paper was
recently published by specialists at Harvard Medical School on the subject of
steroids and regressive autism.
It pretty
much concludes the same as Chez and others have been saying for many years;
corticosteroids can have a profound effect on some types of autism. It remains unlikely that there will ever be
large scale trials, due to the scaremongering about side effects. Much is known about how to minimize the side
effects of steroids, for example tapering and pulse dosing.
Here are
some key points from the paper:-
·
Up
to a third of children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) manifest regressive
autism (R-ASD).They show normal early development followed by loss of language
and social skills. Absent evidence-based therapies, anecdotal evidence suggests
improvement following use of corticosteroids
·
Twenty
steroid-treated R-ASD (STAR) and 24 not-treated ASD patients (NSA), aged 3 - 5
years, were retrospectively identified from a large database.
·
Star
group subjects’ language ratings were significantly improved and more STAR than
NSA group subjects showed significant language improvement. Most STAR group
children showed significant behavioral improvement after treatment. STAR group
language and behavior improvement was retained one year after treatment. Groups
did not differ in terms of minor EEG abnormalities. Steroid treatment produced
no lasting morbidity
·
Steroid
treatment was associated with a significantly increased FMAER response
magnitude, reduction of FMAER response distortion, and improvement in language
and behavior scores. This was not observed in the non-treated group. These
pilot findings warrant a prospective randomized validation trial of steroid
treatment for R-ASD utilizing FMAER, EEG, and standardized ASD, language and
behavior measures, and a longer follow-up period.
·
Referring
physicians often enquire about the utility of adrenal corticosteroids or
glucocorticoids to treat patients with R-ASD
Prednisone
is already a treatment used in PANS, PANDAS and Landau-kleffner syndrome,
which all have autism-like symptoms.
Corticosteroids for the treatment of Landau-kleffner syndrome and
continuous spike-wave discharge during sleep.
'Wicked'
Slightly off-topic but, the following
is relevant.
There was a recent documentary by the BBC about US-style DAN autism therapies now being sold to
parents in the United Kingdom. The UK
has a government funded institute (NICE) that publishes lengthy advice to
doctors as to what drugs to prescribe for almost all conditions, including
autism. UK doctors will get into trouble if they do not follow NICE guidelines.
Commenting
for the BBC, on the DAN-type treatments, Francesca Happe, a professor of
cognitive neuroscience at King's College London and apparently one of the world's
leading researchers into autism, said practitioners who "peddled"
treatments without proof were "wicked".
But how much
proof do you need? And who is to say
which published researcher is serious and which is a charlatan. The lay autism parent might (falsely) assume
that if a researcher is publishing papers, they must be serious and the
conclusions reliable. The reality is
that some of the papers are indeed flawed and the conclusions are
nonsense. That is why I keep a list of the researchers who I believe in.
At the
extreme are bodies like the UK’s NICE, who conclude that absolutely none of the
hundreds/thousands of drugs/supplements proposed for treating core-autism
should be used.
The short
version of the NICE clinical guidelines is below. The much longer version reviews in detail
many of the papers I have reviewed in this blog, but comes to a very different
conclusion.
I read the same papers as NICE and concluded something
entirely different. I found several
drugs that do indeed work. The
difference is that my standard of proof is lower than that of NICE and professor of
cognitive neuroscience at King's College London.
The
DAN/TACA/MAPS/ARI doctors from the US are also hopefully read all these papers,
but they come up with ideas of the sort that do fall into the “wicked “category
mentioned above.
Autism parents are not
surprising bewildered. It is the
parent that ends up deciding where to draw the line between what treatment is genuine
and what is fantasy, perhaps like this one.
Conclusion
Yet again,
we have a therapy based on solid science that is in use by a very small number
of serious mainstream doctors. It has
not crossed into general use due to a lack of large scale trials.
As a result,
medical science continues to tell families that there are no drug therapies for
core autism, except some anti-psychotics, anti-depressants and anticonvulsants
most of which have serious side-effects and/or cause dependence.
In the case
of prednisone, this is a cheap generic drug that does have side effect with
prolonged use. Severe regressive autism can
also have side-effects, like complete loss of speech and cognitive impairment.
The answer
might be parents signing a waiver to get open access to drugs that have been
used successfully in experimental use for autism, without the doctor worrying
about losing his license, or being blamed for any side effects.
Hi Peter, My son has an eye infection and was prescribed a kind of corticosteroid with the brand name Dispersadrom-C eye drops.
ReplyDeleteIt consists of Cloramphenicol and Dexamethasone and can be used for 7 days.
Would it be ok with Bumetanide?
Petra, you would need to check that with a doctor/pharmacist. We have used steroids at the same time as bumetanide with no problems.
DeleteThank you Peter for your reply.
ReplyDeleteDoctor says Dispersadrom is ok with Bumetanide, but having asked your opinion feels even safer to use.
This is the latest study out there which is the first Radnomized Double Blind Placebo-Controlled Trial for prednisolone, very interesting:
ReplyDeleteEffect of prednisolone on language function in children with autistic spectrum disorder: a randomized clinical trial
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0021755719304656
The above trial was recently reviewed by the folks at Harvard.
ReplyDeleteA rational pharmacologic approach toward a biologically meaningful subtype of autism spectrum disorder
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0021755720301467#bib0085
Peter have you had a look at the works of Dr. Gerry Stefanatos. I think he also deserves to be on the Deans list.
Adam, Prednisolone/Prednisone is very potent and we keep it at home for possible severe asthma attacks, but I have used it twice for autism (only once ever for asthma).
DeleteMany people have found this drug, or the similar steroid Dexamethasone, to provide a benefit in autism. This benefit normally comes at the cost of not insignificant side effects.
I will take look at Dr Gerry Stefanatos.
Before opting for the almost impossible task of asking the doctor to prescribe prednisolone under supervision, what do you think can be a safer alternative to see if it's the same sub-type of autism that will be respond to prednisolone ?
DeleteDo you think there can be some other therapy that is safer than prednisone to which the patient can respond to ?
Thanks
Adam, you can safely take a steroid like prednisolone for 5 days, without long lasting side effects. Sometimes a shot course of steroids does provide a long lasting effect in autism, so you might be lucky.
DeleteThere are many immunomodulatory therapies proposed for autism, with a range of mechanisms. Steroids, Suramin, Statins and that is just the ones beginning with "S".
I think most people with autism will find a beneficial anti-inflammatory therapy, but it will take trial and error to find it.
speaking of statins, is there an mg/kg dosage ?
DeleteWhat do you think can be a safe mg/kg/day dosage for an off label trial for someone who is 20kg ?
Is it once a day or twice a day ?
Also it would be helpful if you can update Monty's weight on the polypill page.
Statins are not usually prescribed in people under 10 years old, because cholesterol is not an issue. The logical dose of Atorvastatin in someone with 20kg would be 5mg, or perhaps better just half a 5mg tablet, and just once a day. The effect, if present, is from the first pill. If 5mg has a benefit, then try 2.5mg and see if it gives the same effect. Always use the lowest possible dose.
DeleteThank you for the information Peter, appreciate it.
DeleteSpeaking of statins, I read a few papers that statins can also lower the chances of epilepsy.
I just bough Michael Chez's book (the online kindle version) I think his findings on regressive autism are more relevant to my sons regressive history then Dr. Kelley's theory of Mitochondria.
I think you should also update the regressive autism tab on your blog and include excerpts from his book, that would be very informative for the readers.
I am definitely going for a sleep EEG for my son next week, if the EEG is abnormal I think the first line of therapy has to be Valproic Acid like Chez says.
reading from his book my son might also be a good contender for a steroid.
Dr. Chez's paper and my sons post infectious regression and a maternal autoimmunity history (severe eczema in the family) is pointing towards an autoimmune subtype of autism. He also had eczema earlier when he was a year old on his elbow which was treated with topical prednisolone.
What was your experience with prednisolone when you used it twice for autism ?
I did discuss with you on the PEA blog post that my son had low neutrophils and high lymphocytes l. I gave my son PEA for a week (it gave him an eczema kind of rash on the chest so I had to stop it, also I would take Italian docs like antonucci with a pinch of salt) also he started sleeping very late in the night and quit sleeping in the afternoon which is a much needed break for his mother. I couldn't find much info on the internet on the low NLR phenomenon except some papers on autoimmune lymphoproliferative disorders and infectious mononucleosis (which is also being recognized as autoimmunity), but I did find that prednisolone dosage increases WBC count by increasing neutrophils and lowering lymphocytes (means it increases the NLR)
Thanks again for this blog, I always ask parents who are trying alternate therapies to visit your blog. I think they are being taken advantage of by the alternate practitioners.
I am a 43 year old male with Asperger's and many comorbidities both psychiatric and physical alot related to gut permeability SIBO candida etc...at present I'm taking 50mg of Prednisone for a sacral ilial radiculopathy with severe pain sciatica and neuropathy..I'm well aware that Prednisone could aggravate the microbiome among other things but is it only useful in regressive autism?Is leaky gut a type of autoimmunity that isn't classic?cheers
ReplyDeleteAvi, leaky gut and autoimmunity are seen as being closely related.
ReplyDeleteSome people think the leaky gut comes first and then auto immune problems follow. Here is a good review:
Partners in Leaky Gut Syndrome: Intestinal Dysbiosis and Autoimmunity
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2021.673708/full
Many thanks Peter...I guess for me the 46 seemingly diffuse and unrelated ailments all stem from this dysbiosis and autointoxication by bacterial and fungal toxins leaking through the porous epithelium and literally poisoning the entire body and brain...doesn't take a rocket scientist to extrapolate how the entire organism would eventually break down manifesting every known disease with autoimmunity being the closest link but not the only..thanks once again
ReplyDelete