THE ROLE OF IMMUNE DISORDERS IN THE ETIOLOGY OF AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDER: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW

Authors

  • Danielle Tereza Ferreira Cordeiro Barros Centro Universitário de Excelência
  • Marcella Tosta Dias Centro Universitário de Excelência
  • Maria Carolina Oliveira Brito Centro Universitário de Excelência
  • Paloma Moura Martins Dantas Centro Universitário de Excelência
  • Rafaele Lima Guerra Centro Universitário de Excelência
  • Wallas da Silva Araújo Centro Universitário de Excelência

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51891/rease.v12i3.24434

Keywords:

Autism Spectrum Disorder. Neuroinflammation. Immune System. Cytokines.

Abstract

Introduction: Evidence suggests that immune and neuroinflammatory axes contribute to the pathophysiology of autism spectrum disorder (ASD), although the magnitude and clinical applicability of these findings remain heterogeneous.Objective: To synthesize evidence from primary studies on immune disorders associated with ASD and assess methodological quality by study design.Methods: Systematic review registered in PROSPERO (CRD420251067439) and conducted according to PRISMA 2020. Searches were performed in PubMed/MEDLINE, SciELO, and LILACS (2020–2025), with reference list screening. Inclusion: original observational (cross-sectional/cohort) and experimental/laboratory studies relating ASD to immune–inflammatory markers or mechanisms. Exclusion: reviews, meta-analyses, editorials, case reports, and duplicates. Risk of bias was rated with RoB 2 (experimental) and JBI tools (observational).Results: Of 3,600 records, 12 studies were included. Across human samples and models, increased monocyte IL-6 production and pro-inflammatory transcriptional signatures were observed, alongside microglial polarization and oxidative stress, suggesting a peripheral–CNS inflammatory circuit. Cohort studies associated maternal immune conditions, infections during pregnancy/early life, and prenatal fever with increased ASD risk. Molecular findings indicated microexon mis-splicing in CPEB4 with synaptic impact. Overall quality ranged from moderate to good; limitations included methodological heterogeneity, small samples, and incomplete control of confounders. Conclusion: The evidence supports contributions of immune–inflammatory mechanisms and maternal exposures to ASD risk and phenotypic expression, underscoring the need for standardized biomarkers and multicenter cohorts for clinical validation.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

Danielle Tereza Ferreira Cordeiro Barros, Centro Universitário de Excelência

 

 

Marcella Tosta Dias, Centro Universitário de Excelência

Graduanda em medicina no Centro Universitário de Excelência – Unex- Feira de Santana – Ba.

Maria Carolina Oliveira Brito, Centro Universitário de Excelência

Graduanda em medicina no Centro Universitário de Excelência – Unex- Feira de Santana – Ba.

Paloma Moura Martins Dantas, Centro Universitário de Excelência

Graduanda em medicina no Centro Universitário de Excelência – Unex- Feira de Santana – Ba.

Rafaele Lima Guerra, Centro Universitário de Excelência

Graduanda em medicina no Centro Universitário de Excelência – Unex- Feira de Santana – Ba.

Wallas da Silva Araújo, Centro Universitário de Excelência

Graduando em medicina no Centro Universitário de Excelência – Unex- Feira de Santana – Ba.

Published

2026-03-18

How to Cite

Barros, D. T. F. C., Dias, M. T., Brito, M. C. O., Dantas, P. M. M., Guerra, R. L., & Araújo, W. da S. (2026). THE ROLE OF IMMUNE DISORDERS IN THE ETIOLOGY OF AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDER: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW. Revista Ibero-Americana De Humanidades, Ciências E Educação, 12(3), 1–17. https://doi.org/10.51891/rease.v12i3.24434