Autism incidence and spatial analysis in more than 7 million pupils in English schools: a retrospective, longitudinal, school registry study.
Roman-Urrestarazu Andres, Yang Justin C, van Kessel Robin, Warrier Varun, Dumas Guillaume, Jongsma Hannah, Gatica-Bahamonde Gabriel, Allison Carrie, Matthews Fiona E, Baron-Cohen Simon, Brayne Carol
What this study means for families
This large study looked at autism diagnosis rates across England using school records from 2014-2017. Boys were diagnosed with autism 3.9 times more often than girls. The study found differences in diagnosis rates between ethnic groups and identified geographical areas with higher autism rates. Language barriers and financial hardship may make it harder for some families to access autism diagnosis and support services.
Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.
Research summary
This large-scale retrospective study analyzed autism incidence across England using school registry data from 2014-2017, examining over 31 million person-years and 102,338 newly diagnosed autistic pupils. The research revealed significant disparities in autism diagnosis rates based on demographics and geography. Boys showed 3.9 times higher incidence than girls (668.6 vs 173.2 per 100,000 person-years). Ethnic variations were complex, with highest rates in pupils with unclassified ethnicity and Black pupils, but lower odds for Asian, Black, and Chinese girls in adjusted analyses.
The study identified 2,338 geographical hotspots of high autism incidence and suggested that language barriers and socioeconomic factors may create diagnostic access barriers.
Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.
Key findings
- 1
Boys had 3.9 times higher autism incidence than girls (668.6 vs 173.2 cases per 100,000 person-years)
Confidence: strongRelevance: Confirms well-established sex differences in autism diagnosis rates - 2
Pupils aged 1-3, 4-6, and 10-12 years showed highest autism incidence rates
Confidence: strongRelevance: Identifies key age periods for autism recognition and diagnosis - 3
Asian, Black, and Chinese girls had lower odds of autism diagnosis compared to White girls in adjusted models
Confidence: moderateRelevance: Suggests potential diagnostic disparities requiring attention - 4
Significant geographical clustering with 2,338 high-incidence hotspots identified across England
Confidence: strongRelevance: Indicates regional variations in autism diagnosis that may reflect service access differences
Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.
Clinical implications
Findings highlight significant diagnostic disparities requiring targeted interventions. Language barriers and socioeconomic factors may impede diagnostic access for certain populations. Geographic hotspots suggest need for service equity assessment. Results support developing culturally sensitive diagnostic approaches and addressing access barriers for underrepresented groups.
Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.
Limitations
Study limited to state-funded schools, excluding private education. Relies on educational records which may not capture all autism diagnoses. Cannot distinguish between true incidence variations versus diagnostic access disparities. Observational design prevents causal inference about environmental or social factors.
Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.
Original abstract
Understanding how certain factors affect autism incidence can help to identify inequities in diagnostic access. We aimed to investigate the incidence of autism in England as a function of geography and sociodemographics, examining spatial distribution across health service boundaries. In this retrospective, longitudinal, school registry study, we sourced data for the years 2014-17 from the summer school census, which is a component of the National Pupil Database, a government registry of pupils under state education in England. Our main outcome was the incidence of autism in the English state-funded education system, defined by the amount of new autism-specific Education, Health and Care Plans or autism-specific special education needs and disability support recorded during each summer school census year since the 2014 baseline.
After excluding prevalent cases in 2014, we calculated unadjusted incidence and age-adjusted, sex-adjusted incidence per 100 000 person-years per subsequent school year and by various sociodemographic categories and local authority districts. We report spatial effects using local indicators of spatial association. We used a three-level mixed-effects logistic regression model with two random intercepts (lower-layer super output area [a geographical area in England containing 1000-3000 residents] and pupil identifier) to calculate odds ratios (ORs) for autism incidence, adjusting for age, sex, ethnicity, claimed eligibility for free school meals, ethnic density quintile, Index of Multiple Deprivation quintile, first language spoken at home, and year, with our reference category being White girls without claimed eligibility for free school meals who speak English as their first language. Between 2014 and 2017, our total sample included 31 580 512 person-years and 102 338 newly diagnosed autistic pupils, corresponding to an unadjusted annual autism incidence of 429·1 cases per 100 000 person-years (95% CI 426·4-431·7) and an age-adjusted, sex-adjusted annual incidence of 426·9 cases per 100 000 person-years (423·5-430·4).
The adjusted incidence of autism was slightly higher in 2014-15 than in 2015-16 or 2016-17, and, of the age groups, pupils aged 1-3 years, 4-6 years, and 10-12 years had the highest incidence of autism. Adjusted autism incidence in boys was 3·9-times the incidence in girls (668·6 cases per 100 000 person-years [95% CI 662·5-674·6] vs 173·2 cases per 100 000 person-years [170·1-176·3]). Across ethnic groups, adjusted incidence was highest in pupils who had an unclassified ethnicity (599·4 cases per 100 000 person-years [574·5-624·3]) or were Black (466·9 cases per 100 000 person-years [450·8-483·0]). However, in our fully adjusted mixed-effects logistic regression model, we observed lower odds of autism among Asian (OR 0·65 [0·59-0·71]), Black (0·84 [0·77-0·92]), and Chinese (0·62 [0·42-0·92]) girls compared with White girls when these groups had not claimed free school meals and spoke English as a first language.
Boys from all ethnicities irrespective of first language spoken and free school meals status had increased odds of autism compared with White girls with no claimed eligibility for free school meals who spoke English as their first language. We also found that claimed free school meal eligibility, first language spoken, sex, and ethnicity differentially impacted the odds of autism. Our spatial analysis showed significant spatial autocorrelation across lower-layer super output areas in England, with 2338 hotspots (high-incidence areas surrounded by other high-incidence areas). The incidence of autism varies across sex, age, ethnicity, and geographical location.
Environmental and social factors might interact with autism aetiology. Speaking a language other than English and economic hardship might increase access barriers to autism diagnostic services, autism-specific Education, Health and Care Plans, and school-level support. The Commonwealth Fund, the Institute for Data Valorization, the Fonds de recherche du Québec-Santé, Calcul Quebec, the Digital Research Alliance of Canada, the Wellcome Trust, the Innovative Medicines Initiative, the Autism Centre of Excellence, the Simons Foundation Autism Research Initiative, the Templeton World Charitable Fund, the Medical Research Council, the National Institute for Health and Care Research Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre, and the National Institute for Health and Care Research Applied Research Collaboration East of England-Population Evidence and Data Science.
Evidence Grade
strong
Grade assigned by AutismInsights based on study type and published abstract.
Study Details
- Journal
- The Lancet. Child & adolescent health
- Year
- 2022
- PMID
- 36302393
- DOI
- 10.1016/S2352-4642(22)00247-4
MeSH Terms