Food and Behaviour Research

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30 Sept 2010 - BBC News - New study claims ADHD 'has a genetic link'

FAB RESEARCH COMMENT:

The Lancet  press release touting the findings of research by a group from Cardiff University says: “Study is the first to find direct evidence of ADHD as a genetic disorder.”  This is a gross misrepresentation of the actual findings, so it is good that the BBC's reporter here included several other viewpoints.

Only 15% (around 1 in 7) of the ADHD group studied had 'large and rare variations' in their DNA, compared with 7% (around 1 in 14) of the control group. So the research in no way shows that all  cases of ADHD are linked to genetic anomalies; and what's more, exactly the same anomalies are found in some children without  ADHD.

More fundamentally, genetic and environmental factors always work together, so the media's favourite hackneyed phrase of 'Nature versus  Nurture' is a nonsense. Both are always involved. Furthermore, nutrition is a key environmental factor that can actually modify gene expression, sometimes permanently. (Environmental effects on gene expression are known as 'epigenetic' effects - and some of these can actually be passed on to future generations.)

So diet IS important - particularly for mothers during pregnancy, but also for children and adults, with and without ADHD.

Much of the media coverage presented these findings as showing that diet, parenting or other environmental factors were irrelevant to ADHD. In fact, the researchers did not even look into diet or any other environmental factors. But to her credit, when interviewed for BBC TV, the leading scientist on this study did (unlike the press release) try to emphasise that the picture is a complex one. It is indeed.

ADHD is not a single condition, and many different potential causes of the behaviours that attract this (purely descriptive) diagnosis have already been identified.  As the psychologist Oliver James is reported as saying:  ‘These findings have been hyped in the most outrageous fashion’.

Yes, they have. Where is Ben Goldacre when we need him?

BBC News Report by Jane Dreaper

The first direct evidence of a genetic link to attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder has been found, a study says.

Scientists from Cardiff University, writing in The Lancet, said the disorder was a brain problem like autism - not due to bad parenting. Oliver James, a clinical child psychologist and broadcaster, cited studies which looked at the effect of anxiety among pregnant women, and disturbed early relations between mothers and their babies.

He said: "Only 57 out of the 366 children with ADHD had the genetic variant supposed to be a cause of the illness.

"That would suggest that other factors are the main cause in the vast majority of cases.

"Genes hardly explain at all why some kids have ADHD and not others."
Professor Anita Thapar said: "We found that, compared with the control group, the children with ADHD have a much higher rate of chunks of DNA that are either duplicated or missing.

"This is really exciting - because it gives us the first direct genetic link to ADHD.

"We have looked at lots of potential risk factors in the environment - such as parenting or what happens before birth - but there isn't the evidence to say they're linked to ADHD.

"There's a lot of public misunderstanding about ADHD. Some people say it's not a real disorder, or that it's the result of bad parenting.

"Finding this direct link should address the issue of stigma."

The researchers stressed that there is no single gene behind ADHD, and the work is at too early a stage to lead to any test for the disorder.

But they hope the study will help unravel the biological basis of ADHD. This could eventually lead to new treatments.

The work was largely funded by the Wellcome Trust, with extra support from the Medical Research Council.

The chief executive of a charity and support group ADDIS, Andrea Bilbow, said: "We are very excited. We've always known there was a genetic link - through studies and anecdotally.

"This paper will help us deal more confidently with the sceptics, who are always so eager to blame parents or teachers. It shows there is a definite genetic anomaly in children with ADHD."

But the study has been criticised by some experts.

Professor Tim Kendall, a director of the National Collaborating Centre for Mental Health, said a number of factors caused ADHD and blaming it purely on genetics could mean incorrect treatments.

"I'm pretty sure these studies are not going to produce undoubtable evidence that ADHD is caused solely genetically.

"I am saying it's a mixture of genetic and environmental factors, and the important thing is that we don't end up thinking this is a biological problem which is only subject to biological treatments like Ritalin."


They analysed stretches of DNA from 366 children who had been diagnosed with the disorder.

But other experts agued ADHD was caused by a mixture of genetic and environmental factors. At least 2% of children in the UK are thought to have attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).

Affected children are restless and impulsive. They may also have destructive tendencies, and experience serious problems at school and within family life.

The researchers compared genetic samples from ADHD children, with DNA from 1,047 people without the condition.

They found that 15% of the ADHD group had large and rare variations in their DNA - compared with 7% in the control group.