Center For Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC)
Measles, Mumps, and Rubella
(MMR) Vaccine and Autism Fact Sheet
Basic Information
· The MMR vaccine protects children against dangerous,
even deadly, diseases.
· Because signs of autism may appear at around the same
time children receive the MMR vaccine, some parents may worry that the vaccine causes
autism.
· Carefully performed scientific studies have found no
relationship between MMR vaccine and autism.
· CDC continues to recommend two doses of MMR vaccine for
all children.
Additional Facts
·
MMR is a combination vaccine that protects children from measles, mumps, and rubella
(also known as German measles). The first dose of the vaccine is usually given to
children 12 to 15 months old. The second dose is usually given between 4 and 6 years
of age.
·
In 1998, a study of autistic children raised the question
of a connection between MMR vaccine and autism.
·
The 1998 study has a number of limitations. For example, the study was very small,
involving only 12 children. This is too few cases to make any generalizations about
the causes of autism. In addition, the researchers suggested that MMR vaccination
caused bowel problems in the children, which then led to autism. However, in some
of the children studied, symptoms of autism appeared before symptoms of bowel
disease.
·
In 2004, 10 of the 13 authors of the 1998 study retracted
the study's interpretation. The authors stated that the data were not able to establish
a causal link between MMR vaccine and autism.
·
Other larger studies have found no relationship between MMR vaccine and autism.
For example, researchers in the UK studied the records of 498 children with autism
born between 1979 and 1998. They found:
o
The percentage of
children with autism who received MMR vaccine was the same as the percentage of
unaffected children in the region who received MMR vaccine.
o
There was no difference in
the age of diagnosis of autism in vaccinated and unvaccinated children.
o
The onset of "regressive"
symptoms of autism did not occur within 2, 4, or 6 months of receiving the MMR vaccine.
·
Groups of experts, including the American Academy of Pediatrics, agree that MMR
vaccine is not responsible for recent increases in the number of children with autism.
In 2004, a report by the Institute of Medicine (IOM) concluded that there is no
association between autism and MMR vaccine, or vaccines that contain thimerosal
as a preservative.
·
There is no published scientific evidence showing that
there is any benefit to separating the combination MMR vaccine into three individual
shots.