TOP 5 ASD Research Papers: 2026-05-07 연구 요약
This health signal was created by a user. It may contain unverified medical claims. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making health decisions.
Today’s ASD research highlights critical clinical findings, including the reliability of telehealth-based diagnosis, risk factors for co-occurring autism and epilepsy, and the safety of prenatal acetaminophen exposure. Notably, a study from UC Riverside on remote assessment and a large-scale cohort study on epilepsy co-occurrence offer immediate implications for improving access to early diagnosis and managing comorbidities. This aligns with recent work from Yale (May 1st) on genetic pathways, which is shaping a new understanding of disease mechanisms.
Today’s Top Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) Research — 2026-05-07
Key Studies of the Day
1. Telehealth Accurately Diagnoses Autism in Children
- Authors / Affiliation: UC Riverside research team
- Journal / Source: Reported by DistilINFO Publications, 2026-05-06
- Study Design: A reliability study of telehealth diagnosis using structured video-based assessments evaluated by two independent clinical teams.
- Sample: A pediatric group including children with ASD who have limited speech.
- Key Findings: Telehealth assessments are as accurate as in-person evaluations, providing highly reliable results even for children with limited language development.
- Clinical/Research Implications: This offers a pathway for early diagnosis in rural or remote areas with limited access to specialists. It provides a policy foundation for using telehealth to reduce wait times and speed up interventions. The dual-clinical team structure is also being noted as a model for reducing diagnostic bias.
- Limitations: As this is based on a summary, specific statistical metrics (such as Cohen's kappa) require verification through the full text.

2. Study Examines Factors Associated with Co-occurrence of Autism and Epilepsy in Children
- Authors / Affiliation: Multi-institutional research team
- Journal / Source: Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology; reported by News-Medical.net, 2026-05-06
- Study Design: Large-scale population-based cohort study.
- Sample: A large group of children with epilepsy (who are at higher risk of co-occurring ASD than the general population).
- Key Findings: There is a significantly elevated risk of comorbid ASD in children with epilepsy, with specific demographic and clinical factors identified as linked to this co-occurrence.
- Clinical/Research Implications: Provides evidence for strengthening clinical protocols to mandate regular ASD screening for children diagnosed with epilepsy. It suggests directions for further research into shared pathological mechanisms between the two neurodevelopmental conditions and supports the development of multidisciplinary care models.
- Limitations: Due to the nature of population-based cohorts, the results indicate association rather than direct causation; further analysis by epilepsy subtype remains a future task.

3. Danish Study Finds Acetaminophen Exposure Not Associated with Increased Autism Risk
- Authors / Affiliation: Danish research team
- Journal / Source: Reported by Contemporary OB/GYN, 2026-05-05
- Study Design: Large-scale population-based cohort study (utilizing Danish health registries).
- Sample: Mothers and children exposed to acetaminophen during pregnancy.
- Key Findings: Analysis of the confidence interval (CI) upper bound indicates that it is unlikely (less than 12%) that prenatal acetaminophen exposure is associated with an increased risk of ASD.
- Clinical/Research Implications: Strengthens the evidence for the safety of using acetaminophen for pain and fever management during pregnancy, helping clinicians reduce unnecessary anxiety in patients. The study is noted for overcoming the methodological limitations (such as unadjusted confounding variables) of previous research.
- Limitations: Further analysis based on dosage and duration is needed, and caution should be exercised regarding the generalization of these findings to all neurodevelopmental outcomes.

Major Trends
- Rise of Telehealth Diagnosis: The UC Riverside study demonstrates that video-based structured assessments match the reliability of in-person visits, serving as a practical solution to bridge gaps in diagnostic accessibility.
- Focus on Comorbidity: Research, such as the autism-epilepsy study, shows a shift toward understanding ASD as a point of intersection for multiple neurodevelopmental and neurological conditions rather than a standalone diagnosis.
- Re-evaluating Prenatal Exposure Safety: The relationship between prenatal medication (like acetaminophen) and ASD is being reassessed via large-scale registry data, with increased methodological rigor clarifying previous debates.
- Paradigm Shift in Genetic Pathways: Research from Yale (May 1st) suggests that the "pathway" by which genes affect the brain may be more significant than the specific genes involved, shifting the interpretive framework of genetic studies.
Action Items for Clinicians and Researchers
- Consider Adopting Remote Diagnosis: For clinicians in areas with long wait times or limited specialist access, evaluate the potential of implementing the UC Riverside dual-team, video-based assessment protocol.
- Recommended Reviews: For context, review the Zwaigenbaum et al. (2015) comprehensive review on early ASD screening and recent literature on the remote adaptation of the ADOS-2.
- Methodological Caution: As today's reports are based on news summaries, statistical data (κ-values, OR, CI, etc.) may not be fully available. Verify findings with original research before altering clinical protocols to avoid over-interpretation.
What to Watch Next
Following the publication of the large-scale cohort study on epilepsy-autism comorbidity in Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology, we expect accelerated discussions on meta-analyses and updates to clinical guidelines. Also, keep an eye out for the full release of data from the telehealth ASD diagnostic reliability study.
This content was collected, curated, and summarized entirely by AI — including how and what to gather. It may contain inaccuracies. Crew does not guarantee the accuracy of any information presented here. Always verify facts on your own before acting on them. Crew assumes no legal liability for any consequences arising from reliance on this content.