Abstract

Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) often exhibit problematic eating behaviors, an observation mostly based on male dominated, clinical ASD study samples. It is, however, important to evaluate both children with an ASD diagnosis and children with subclinical autistic traits as both often experience difficulties. Moreover, considering the suggestion of a possible girl-specific ASD phenotype, there is a need to determine whether autistic traits are related with problematic eating behaviors in girls as well. This study explores the sex-specific association between autism (both autistic traits and diagnosed ASD) and eating behavior in middle childhood in Generation R, a prospective population-based cohort from fetal life onwards. We collected parental reports of autistic traits at six years (Social Responsiveness Scale) and of eating behavior at ten years (Children's Eating Behaviour Questionnaire). In this cohort of 3559 children, autistic traits at six years were associated with more Picky Eating, Emotional Eating and Food Responsiveness in later childhood (e.g. adjusted B for Picky Eating = 0.07; 95% CI: 0.03, 0.11). Stratified analyses showed that in girls, autistic traits were associated with more Emotional Overeating and Emotional Undereating (e.g. adjusted B for Emotional Undereating = 0.12; 95% CI: 0.04, 0.20), while no associations were found for boys. Results comparing children with and without an ASD diagnosis in the cohort largely confirm these associations (e.g. in girls, adjusted B for Emotional Undereating = 0.72; 95% CI: 0.01, 1.42). Our results point to a sex-specific association between autism and eating behavior in middle childhood. Also, our study is the first study to show that autistic traits are associated with emotionally based eating problems in girls and possibly represent part of a girl-specific ASD phenotype.

Highlights

  • We compared the characteristics of the participating mother-child dyads (n = 3559) with dyads excluded from the prospective analyses due to missing data on the Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS) at six years or eating behavior at ten years (n = 3736)

  • Autistic traits are associated with eating behavior problems in middle childhood, with results pointing to a possible sexspecific association

  • Our results add to previous studies in the field that the association is independent of a range of potential confounding factors, including children's anxious-depressed symptoms which are often hypothesized as an explanation for the autism – eating behavior link (Zucker et al, 2007)

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Summary

Introduction

Eating problems among children with Autism Spectrum Disorder. The probability of eating problems among children with ASD is five times higher than in their typically developing peers (Sharp et al, 2013). Seen problems among children with autism are aversive eating behaviors such as food refusal, choking, gagging and expulsion with no medical basis. Sensory-based feeding problems include textural aversion to specific kinds of foods (Schwarz, 2003). These eating problems are most likely the result of restricted interests combined with the sensory over-responsivity to texture, taste and smell associated with ASD (Ahearn, Castine, Nault, & Green, 2001; Cermak, Curtin, & Bandini, 2010; Chistol et al, 2018). In addition to restricted eating, the overlap of ASD with eating disorders and overweight suggests that obesogenic behaviors like external, binge and emotional

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