{"id":4675,"date":"2021-10-25T10:16:49","date_gmt":"2021-10-25T14:16:49","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.med.unc.edu\/healthsciences\/research\/?p=4675"},"modified":"2021-10-25T10:27:07","modified_gmt":"2021-10-25T14:27:07","slug":"clare-harrop-receives-5-year-nih-award-to-study-sex-specific-trajectories-in-autism","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.med.unc.edu\/healthsciences\/research\/clare-harrop-receives-5-year-nih-award-to-study-sex-specific-trajectories-in-autism\/","title":{"rendered":"Clare Harrop Receives 5-Year NIH Award to Study Sex-Specific Trajectories in Autism Spectrum Disorder"},"content":{"rendered":"
Clare Harrop, Assistant Professor in the Department of Allied Health Sciences, has received a 5-year, $3.28 million R01 award from the NIH (Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development<\/a>) to chart the impact of assigned sex at birth on developmental trajectories in young autistic children. The objective of the project is to characterize how development in autism varies by assigned sex with the goal of informing future sex-sensitive screening protocols and providing evidence for sex- and gender-sensitive interventions that better address the needs of autistic females.<\/p>\n \u201cAutism is diagnosed at a rate of four males to one female, so we know considerably less about the profiles and trajectories of autistic females,\u201d says Harrop. \u201cHowever, there is a growing consensus that females are underdiagnosed and understudied, potentially due to differences in how autism presents in females. What we do know comes from small, single time-point studies which prevent our understanding of how autistic males and females may differ over time and during different developmental periods.\u201d<\/p>\n Harrop, with University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill collaborators Daniel Bauer<\/a> (Psychology and Neuroscience), Heather Hazlett<\/a> (Psychiatry) and Rebecca Grzadzinski<\/a> (Psychiatry), will study the developmental trajectories of young autistic females and males, as well as non-autistic peers, using multiple methods within an accelerated longitudinal design.<\/p>\n \u201cSuch a design allows us to extend our previous findings to a larger sample and provide a novel way to chart development in harder to reach groups, such as autistic females,\u201d says Harrop.<\/p>\n The project will also collaborate with John Strang<\/a> (Children\u2019s National Hospital) to study how gender impacts development, and with Julia Parish-Morris<\/a> (Children\u2019s Hospital of Philadelphia) to chart the emergence of camouflaging behaviors in autism.<\/p>\n \u201cAutistic youth and adults are more likely to experience gender diversity than non-autistic youth. But no study has charted the early development of gender in autism,\u201d says Harrop. \u201cAdditionally, autistic individuals, particularly females, are more likely to employ certain behaviors, such as making eye contact or small talk, to mitigate some of their day-to-day challenges. We know this can have profound downstream effects on mental health.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/p>\n