Science Vs - Does Tylenol Cause Autism?
Episode Date: September 18, 2025RFK Jr.’s big report on autism is scheduled to come out this month, and we’re hearing that it might point the finger at Tylenol as a possible cause. And the science on this gets confusing fast. Be...cause some studies do suggest that taking acetaminophen while you’re pregnant could increase your kid’s chance of being autistic or having ADHD. But other research doesn’t find a clear connection — and scientists think there could be a whole other explanation here. So, what’s going on?? We sort it out, with help from epidemiologist Prof. Brian Lee. Find our transcript here: https://bit.ly/ScienceVsTylenolAutism In this episode, we cover: (00:00) The fears around acetaminophen and autism (02:18) Could acetaminophen be an endocrine disruptor? (06:25) Could acetaminophen affect brain development? (10:44) What if something else is going on? (20:26) Is there a link between acetaminophen and autism — or not?? This episode was produced by Meryl Horn, with help from Rose Rimler, Michelle Dang, and Ekedi Fausther-Keeys. We’re edited by Blythe Terrell. Mix and sound design by Bumi Hidaka. Our executive producer is Wendy Zukerman. Fact checking and consulting by Erica Akiko Howard. Music written by Peter Leonard, Bobby Lord, So Wiley, Emma Munger and Bumi Hidaka. Thanks to the researchers we spoke to for this episode and our other episode on autism. Science Vs is a Spotify Studios Original. Listen for free on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. Follow us and tap the bell for episode notifications. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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Hi, I'm Merrill Horn filling in for Wendy Zuckerman, and you're listening to Science Verses.
This is the show that pits facts against acetamina thin.
Today on the show, does taking Tylenol when you're pregnant make it more likely that your kid will be autistic?
This idea has been all over the news the past couple weeks because of a big report that's coming from the U.S. government.
It's supposedly going to reveal the true causes of autism.
And now what's going around is the claim that it's going to talk about Tylenol.
HHS is set to release a report that will link autism to Tylenol use during pregnancy.
The use of Tylenol by pregnant women may be linked to autism in children.
The claim is shaking up medicine and raising questions from doctors.
And the government hasn't confirmed that the report will talk about acetamine.
But this idea, it isn't something that came out of nowhere.
or some totally fringe scientific theory.
There are lots of legit studies on this,
and some of them do seem to suggest
that popping acetamapin during pregnancy
is linked not just to autism, but to ADHD
and other stuff going on with the brain.
Meanwhile, fears around taking Tylenol when you're pregnant
have been spreading on social media for years,
and these new reports have added fuel to the fire.
I have been scared to death for days.
Here's why you shouldn't take Tylenol if you're
pregnant or you're thinking about getting pregnant.
I took Tylenol through
my whole pregnancy. I have a lot
of fucking questions right now.
And people better start fucking talking.
And yeah, this does raise some big effing questions.
Because tons of people take meds with acinamenefin in them when they're pregnant.
Studies find that more than half of pregnant people in the U.S. take these drugs.
So what's going on here?
Can taking Tylenol when you're pregnant up the chance that your kid will
be autistic? When it comes to Tylenol, a lot of people are like...
I have a lot of fucking questions right now. But then there's science. Science versus
will be right back after the break.
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Welcome back.
This is Meryl, and today we're diving into this question of whether there's a link between acetamine and autism.
With me, a senior producer, Rose Rimler.
Hey, Rose.
Hi, Merrill.
So, yeah, you may remember that we worked on this whole autism episode a few months ago, right?
Yeah.
And we covered less like what causes autism, why it looks like it's gotten more common in the past few decades.
Mm-hmm.
And while I was working on that, I talked to a scientist who looked at Tylenol or acetaminophen.
So it was kind of perfect because when I saw all of this was hitting the news, I was like, oh, now I can call that guy back up.
You had this in your back pocket, just waiting to go.
Yeah.
It was all set to go.
So, yeah, this is Brian Lee,
Professor of Epidemiology at Drexel University.
Hello.
Hey, Merrill.
How are you?
It's been a very heptic last few days.
I bet.
Yeah, he's getting kind of swarmed.
And I wanted him to help me understand,
like, where this idea came from in the first place,
this idea that acetaminophen could affect a fetus.
Like, if we were going to build the case against acetaminephine,
according to science, where would the story start?
And apparently, these concerns have been floating around for a while.
Over a decade ago, the first sort of research came out about acetaminopin during pregnancy
and neurodevelopmental disorders.
And that idea isn't crazy because it's been previously linked with other sort of disorders.
For example, specific birth defects, possible sex hormone issues.
Yes. Huh. So this was surprising to me, like sex hormone issues. So Tylenol or acetaminophen,
we already know it can affect a fetus. Well, there had been research on it, for sure.
Okay. Suggesting that there might be some risks here, which was, it was surprising to me because I've been
pregnant and doctors will always tell you that Tylenol and other stuff with acetaminophen in it
is the safe one to take. You're not supposed to take ibuprofen because that's,
thought to mess up blood flow to the fetus and has been linked to congenital birth defects.
Acetaminophen is thought to be like the safer of the two.
I didn't know that. So like if you're pregnant and you feel fluy or you have some pain,
you're supposed to take Tylenol, not one of the other ones. Yeah, that's why it's so common.
It's like the one that for so long has thought to be relatively safe. But then they, but even though
they have these suspicions from these other conditions? Well, there, yeah, there had been these
kind of like trickling out of like concerns, like Brian said, that it might be messing with
sex hormones, kind of acting as an endocrine disruptor. That's so random. Yeah. No, at first,
I was like, what? But apparently back 15 years ago, some researchers pointed out that
some painkillers sort of look like a type of endocrine disruptor that I'm sure you've heard of
phallates. Sure. They're an element in plastics that are thought to be an endocrine disruptor.
Exactly, yeah. And so they tried testing whether painkillers, including acetaminophen, acted like thallates when they put them on cells in a dish. And they found that, yeah, they kind of did. Oh, interesting. And we think thallates might mess up hormones like testosterone and the body. And so researchers started looking into this. And some of them did find that people who took acetaminophen during pregnancy were a more likely.
to have a son with undescended testicles when they were born. Huh, okay. Yeah, so some researchers
were finding these things, not in every study, but there were these hints that something might
be going on here. And that was the backdrop for this new wave of studies looking at the brain
because we know that hormones can affect brain development. So if something's messing with
the hormones, maybe it could also change how the brain is developing in the fetus. Okay, that
make sense. And then studies
start coming, looking at whether
pregnant people who took acetamine
were more likely to have a kid with autism.
So like, you know,
some of them would get thousands of pregnant
moms and ask them some questions.
They collected data on whether
a mom used acedaminopin.
Did you take Tylenol? Yes, no,
that kind of thing. And
then they followed the baby
after it was born to see
if the baby developed autism.
Mm-hmm. That's useful for our purposes.
Yeah, exactly. Like, they follow these kids and then checked whether they're autistic.
And these studies, they were finding stuff, but it was a little weird. Like, one of these studies found that it up the chance for autism, but only when the autism was accompanied by hyperactivity symptoms.
Another study found that boys were more likely to be autistic with this exposure to acetaminopin in the womb.
but not girls.
Huh.
Okay.
Kind of confusing.
Yeah.
Like, none of these studies
was like a slam dunk on its own.
But at the same time,
dozens of other studies
were also coming out
looking at other stuff,
especially ADHD
in finding that rates of ADHD
were up
and these kids exposed to acinaminin in the womb.
Oh, okay.
And yeah, in some cases
it looked like
the link.
was strongest for mothers who took acetaminophen pretty often, like in all three trimesters.
So there's like a dose response element as well. That's what it looked like. And in 2021, this all
comes to a head. A paper comes out from a bunch of researchers who'd been studying this called a
consensus statement. They issued a quote, call for a precautionary action, unquote, and basically
suggested that people should pump the brakes on these pills, minimize the amount of acetamethin
that they take during pregnancy. Here's Brian. And then to top it off, they publish in a nature
journal, which is one of the most highly regarded scientific journals out there. And so this
statement really made scientists pay attention. Up until that point, most people just kind of treated
it like, oh, you know, like a new study pops up every day. You aren't really sure what to believe
or not, but when a consensus statement came out, it gave it like a stamp of authority.
Yeah, I would feel that way about a consensus statement in nature or a nature offshoot.
Yeah.
And some parents even started suing the companies that make meds with acetaminophen in them,
saying that they should have warning labels on them about these risks.
But as all of this was happening, a lot of scientists were like, wait a second.
When you use a phrase like consensus statement, it implies,
sort of every single expert in the room believes X, Y, and Z.
Like nine out of ten dentists recommend Colgate or something of that sort.
So it implies a sort of authoritative weight to the evidence.
And implying that this was the consensus seemed to piss a lot of scientists off.
Some of them wrote responses to that consensus statement saying that it was way too soon
to come out so hard against acetaminophen, saying that the evidence they cited.
was, quote, weak inconsistence
into a large extents
methodologically inadequate, unquote.
So they're saying the studies are crap.
Well, basically, yeah.
That's the sciencey way of saying,
what, this?
That, you know, this is not enough.
And so a lot of scientists
were really skeptical of this
and didn't buy this story,
scientists like Brian.
Does taking Tylenol actually increase
when you're pregnant
increase the chance
that your kid will have autism?
The answer,
right now
points towards no.
Oh, really?
Yeah. So that's the short of it.
Wow.
Up next, the long of it.
We'll hear the other side of the story
and tell you whether or not
you can have your damn Tylenol
after the break.
Welcome back. This is Merrill. So far, we've gone through a lot of the evidence against acetaminophen, the ingredient in medicines like Tylenol. Lots of studies seem to find that taking it while you're pregnant does increase the chance that your kid will be autistic or have ADHD. Are you ready for the rest of the science? Rose Rimler? Yes. Are you ready? Yes. I'm ready. All right. So here's where Brian Lee, our epidemiologist, hero, comes in gallantly with a shy.
tiny new approach to looking at this question.
His paper came out just last year.
We had a study funded by NIH before everything went to hell.
And we were like, hey, we could actually look at this.
And so Brian teams up with some Swedish researchers
because he's actually really into IKEA.
I don't think that's why.
Yeah, you got me.
I think it's because the Scandinavians keep really good records, public health records.
Yeah, it's because they have an amazing day.
database.
Sweden, having its lovely universal healthcare system, means that you can track everyone.
They don't just disappear in the system.
They're there.
They're tracked.
Everyone has access to this, right?
So yeah, they got data from a ton of kids, almost two and a half million of them.
Basically, every kid who was born there over a 24-year period.
And they also had data from the moms, details about their medical.
care, like the medicines that they took during pregnancy. And so now Brian's team looked to
see, were the kids exposed to acetaminophen in utero more likely to be autistic? And right
off the bat, they found that yes, they were. Oh, so they found that the kids who were exposed
to acetaminophen had a 20 to 30 percent higher chance of being autistic. Oh, that's not what I was
expecting. You were about to tell me. Right. Oh, but.
But actually, Brian's team was sort of relieved when they found this.
This shows that we're not in crazy land, for example, that somehow our data are not flawed, we're not flawed.
Everything is working as anticipated.
And that's because the effects that Brian was seeing in his data was in the same ballpark as what other groups had found.
But here is where Brian and his team took a different path.
They wanted to see if other factors might be muddling up the data here.
making it look like it's the acetaminophen to blame when really it's something else entirely.
Yeah, okay. So Brian is trying to think of, are there other factors that might come into play here
and trying to like do some science to sort of suss those out, basically?
Yeah. And so to try to do that sussing out, he starts checking like, okay, what if some of the
other factors that we know are linked to autism could be contributing to that effect that he saw,
that 20 to 30% increased chance.
Because like we talked about in our earlier episode on autism,
we know that the age of the mom can affect the chance of whether her kid will be autistic.
Like older moms are more likely to have autistic kids.
Or if the mom has some other health condition or got sick during pregnancy,
that might increase the chance for autism too.
So those factors have been known for a while and are generally pretty well accepted.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
And so Brian's team took another look at the data, and when they started accounting for some of that stuff, like how old the moms were, the effects of xenomenefin got smaller.
It went from increasing the chance of having an autistic kid by 20 or 30 percent, down to 5 percent.
When it's down to like a 5 percent increase in risk, you start to actually wonder whether or not it's real or not.
Could it be like moms who are older are more likely to take Tylenol?
because they're like
have more aches and pains
or something like that
and we know
that's separately
associated with autism
that kind of a thing?
Yeah, exactly.
Or a mom being sicker, right?
Like, you don't just take
Tylenol for funsies.
Yeah.
So the other studies
weren't adjusting
for stuff like
age of the parent,
you know,
other health conditions,
stuff like that.
Yeah,
basically they weren't all
doing the same type of adjustments.
Okay.
So that's one thing. And then there's another massive factor that contributes to whether someone's autistic. Their genes. Oh, yeah. Yeah. They think that this is like the number one thing that determines whether someone's autistic. It's like 70 to 90 percent of it. So Brian's team wanted to know, could that be part of the story too? And that's sort of tricky to sort out. Like ideally you'd look at identical twins, right, and expose one to acetaminophen.
in the womb and then see if there's like a difference in autism rights.
I guess. I don't know how you would do that. Yeah, exactly. You can't do that. But there's
another way to get at this. They could look at siblings in their data. What if we did this within
the same family unit? So basically kids born to the same mom, but during one pregnancy, the mom used
a synonym infant, and the other pregnancy, the mom didn't. Right? So then you control at least
partially for genetics. Yeah, that's great. So Brian's team looked in their giant Swedish database
and gathered thousands of cases like this. They crunched the numbers and here's what they found.
Everything flatlined in terms of risk. You know, what was already a very minimal increase in
risk just flatline to absolutely no difference in risk or a child who is exposed. No increased
chance of autism. No increased risk for autism, for ADHD, for intellectual disability.
It was just a pure flatline. Yeah. So what this means is that within a family, whether or not
the mom took a scene in menofin, the chance that her kid was autistic was the same. So can you put
this all together for me? Like what, what's going on?
here exactly. Okay, yes. So the more I learned about this, the more I realized that there could be
a completely different explanation for why acetaminophen and autism might seem like they're
linked. Because like if you imagine, like say you're a mom of an autistic kid, that means that you're
also more likely to be on the autism spectrum yourself, right? You probably have some of these
autism genes too. And being on the spectrum, having some autistic traits, that's actually
been linked to having more pain when you're pregnant. It's also been linked to having migraines.
Yeah. And so, like, we have these reasons why people on the spectrum might be more likely
to take acetaminopin. So maybe that's why it's looking like it's the medicine causing the
autism. But we have a way of explaining all of this without blaming the acetaminopin at all.
So, all right. So this is like a classic sort of red herring science story. Yeah. So like it looked like it was this one thing, but it's actually that one thing is associated with this other thing that it was sort of covering up. Yeah, that could really be what's going on here. I mean, it would be like if you looked at your chance of playing outdoor pickleball, that might go up along with how likely you are to have had ice cream recently.
but really both of these things are just linked because it's warmer outside uh-huh yeah exactly exactly
that's what i mean yeah it's like they're not directly influencing the other it's just like
they're both responding to the same third variable yes there's a third variable um exactly
that's what it seems like to me um but there is still like a back and forth here a bit of a nerd
fight. Like other researchers saying Brian's study isn't perfect either and there are still reviews
coming out that say there is a link between acetaminophen and stuff like autism. So I asked
Brian about these studies. I guess like normally I would trust a meta-analysis looking at a bunch of
studies over like a couple studies here and there saying something else. Like why should I trust
your study more than this meta-analysis? So one of the
the fun things with the meta analysis is that it's a garbage and garbage out kind of a thing.
You can feed it garbage, but your meta analysis is not going to turn this garbage into something
beautiful. You can repeat the wrong thing many times in completely different samples and get the
same wrong results in every single sample. And yeah, it's not like he's saying that these are all
terrible scientists. But more that these reviews are mostly looking at studies that didn't have
that genetic stuff. Like they couldn't look at siblings. They just didn't have that data. And so
they couldn't do what Brian's team did. But Brian's study, it's not the only one that did do that
kind of like sibling analysis. And so like there's one that just came out a couple weeks ago
from Japan, and that did the same thing, and it backed up Brian's study.
Okay, so given all that, what do you make of all this?
Like, if you were pregnant right now, would you take Tylenol?
Well, for the autism question, I do find studies like Bryans to be the most convincing.
Like, I don't think there's a clear link here.
And even to go back to those other concerns around Tylenol, like that idea that.
that it might be a hormone disruptor.
Oh, the undescended testicles.
Exactly.
What about the undescended testicles?
And to go back to those, those studies on the undescended testicles are super mixed.
So, like, some studies will find a link there.
Other studies don't.
And actually, the most recent review that I could find on this said that most studies don't find
more undescended testicles in babies exposed to acetaminopin in utero.
So even the thing that started this whole suspicion of acetaminopin during pregnancy off, that has actually a pawn for their investigation not really borne out.
Like there might not actually be a link there either.
No, yeah, exactly.
And a bunch of big medical groups agree here.
They say that we don't have evidence that taking acetaminopin during pregnancy causes autism or issues with the development of the fetus like the FDA, regulators in Europe.
a big group of OBGYNs.
But, like, yeah, just in case, if I did take acetyaminephine,
I'd try not to take it for, like, weeks at a time.
Because generally, some of the studies that do find risks
only find them if you take acetaminephin for, like, longer periods of time.
It also depends, I guess, on what you're taking it for.
I mean, I'm not a, I'm not a, this is not medical advice,
but it does make me wonder, like, if you have a high,
fever. Yeah. That might be worse for the fetus than the like infantismal risk of some Tylenol
on their brain development, right? Yes, actually. That's true too. So having a fever when you're
pregnant, we know that ups the chance for lots of serious stuff like birth defects for the kid,
heart malformations, premature birth. And fevers also happen to be linked to a kid being autistic
later. Oh. Uh-huh. Okay, that's very interesting and fairly satisfying, actually. Yeah.
All right. And by the way, we did reach out to the company that owns Tylenol, and they sent us a big
statement pointing to some of the science that we've talked about. And they said, quote,
we continue to believe that taking acetaminophen does not cause neurodevelopmental disorders,
including autism, unquote. And for Brian's part, he really doesn't think the science supports the
idea that taking a little Tylenol when you're pregnant makes the kids later become autistic or
have ADHD. Like taking off my epidemiologist hat and just, you know, as a person had,
like blame is damaging. It's harmful. Like, and it doesn't exactly help. People might be blaming
themselves for like that one random Tylenol they took when, you know, they were pregnant 10 years
ago. And, you know, if we can help, you know, take away some of that guilt that's there, I think
that's nice because people shouldn't be feeling guilty about these things in the past.
Yeah, feel guilty about something else.
Go back to feeling guilty about eating lunch meat.
Yeah.
All right, well, thanks, Rose.
Thanks, Merrill.
That's science versus.
All right, Rose, do you want to ask me how many citations I have in this episode?
Oh, yeah, Merrill.
How many citations do you have in this episode?
We have 59 citations.
So if you want to see all the science that went into this episode, check out the transcripts.
You can find links to that, which has all these beautiful citations in the show notes.
And we did reach out to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services about this.
And a spokesperson said, quote, until we release the final report, any claims about its contents are nothing more than speculation, unquote.
And if you want to learn more about autism, check out our other episode on this, called Autism, the Real Reason It's Going Up.
And if you want to tell us what you think of this episode or have episode ideas,
reach out to us.
Our Instagram is Science underscore VS.
This episode was produced by me, Merrill Horn, with help from Rose Rimler, Michelle Dang,
and Akeddy Foster Keys.
We're edited by Blythe Terrell, mix and sound design by Bumi Hedaka.
Our executive producer is Wendy Zuckerman, fact-checking and consulting by Erica Akiko Howard.
Music written by Peter Leonard, Bobby Lord, So Wiley, Emma Munger, and Bumi Hadaka.
Thanks to all the researchers that we spoke to for this episode and our other episode on autism.
Science Versus is a Spotify studio's original.
Listen for free on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.
And if you do listen on Spotify, follow us and tap the bell for episode notifications.