What RFK Jr.’s Unproven Autism Treatment Could Mean for Autistic Patients and Their Families

What RFK Jr.’s Unproven Autism Treatment Could Mean for Autistic Patients and Their Families

Tylenol, Autism, and a Controversial New Treatment: Inside RFK Jr.’s Bold Claims and the Science Behind Them

In a dramatic announcement last September, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and President Donald Trump declared that the federal government had uncovered a definitive link between autism and mothers taking acetaminophen (commonly known as Tylenol) during pregnancy. The proclamation sent shockwaves through the medical community, drawing swift and fierce criticism from scientists outside the administration. Yet, this controversial claim is just one piece of a broader and more concerning shift in the Trump administration’s approach to autism treatment and research.

On that same day, RFK Jr. made another bold assertion: the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) would soon approve a new treatment for autism—a form of folate (vitamin B9) called leucovorin. Much like the acetaminophen claim, the scientific evidence supporting leucovorin as a treatment for autism is far from conclusive. Many experts are deeply concerned about the potential consequences if this drug becomes widely prescribed without robust clinical validation.

“The idea of doing this for everyone—we’re going to see side effects, we’re going to see negative outcomes,” warns Audrey Brumback, a pediatric neurologist specializing in autism and other neurodevelopmental conditions at UT Health Austin, in an interview with Gizmodo.

The Science Behind Leucovorin: A Shaky Foundation

Leucovorin, also known as folinic acid, is a form of folate—a vitamin essential for many bodily functions, including red blood cell production and healthy fetal development. This is why doctors recommend that pregnant women take folic acid supplements, as low folate levels increase the risk of neural tube defects in newborns. Historically, leucovorin has been used to mitigate the toxic side effects of certain chemotherapy drugs. It’s also an effective treatment for a rare condition called cerebral folate deficiency (CFD).

CFD is characterized by low folate levels in the brain but normal levels in the blood, making it difficult to detect. This deficiency can lead to neurological symptoms such as seizures, intellectual disability, speech and coordination difficulties, typically emerging around age two. CFD is often caused by defective antibodies that attack folate receptor alpha, a protein crucial for transporting folate across the blood-brain barrier. It can also be linked to rare inherited genetic mutations in the FOLR1 gene. Leucovorin can bypass the defective folate receptor alpha, raising folate levels in the brains of people with CFD. Early treatment can help children avoid developmental delays, though older patients can still benefit.

Some symptoms of CFD overlap with those seen in severe cases of autism, and research suggests that people with autism may be more likely to have CFD or antibodies against folate receptor alpha. This has led some scientists to be cautiously optimistic about leucovorin’s potential for children with both autism and CFD.

During the September announcement, RFK Jr. claimed leucovorin was an “exciting therapy” that might benefit “large numbers of children” with autism. Marty Makary, the current FDA commissioner, went even further, stating that leucovorin could possibly help “hundreds of thousands of kids”—a substantial portion of U.S. children diagnosed with autism. A 2016 study estimated that at least 1.5 million children in the U.S. had diagnosed autism, though this number has likely risen since.

However, the actual language of the FDA decision only extends leucovorin’s labeling to treat CFD, with barely any mention of autism. Many scientists and doctors in the field remain skeptical about the drug’s future as an autism treatment.

“The idea of having a medicine be used off-label is not new, and that in itself is not a problem. It’s just, what are we basing this recommendation on?” Brumback asks. “This is not a strong evidence base. We’re basically still at the anecdote phase.”

A Fragile Evidence Base Crumbles Further

The research supporting leucovorin for treating autism is remarkably thin, and it’s gotten even thinner recently. Last week, the European Journal of Pediatrics retracted a trial testing leucovorin supplements in children with autism after outside scientists discovered statistical inconsistencies that cast doubt on the study’s results and conclusions. The authors stated they intended to revise and resubmit their study. This trial was one of only five such trials conducted so far and the largest to date, with 77 children.

Beyond these studies, there isn’t much substantial data supporting the basic premises underlying the therapy. Scientists aren’t certain if children with autism are truly more likely to have CFD, or if CFD or its causes (antibodies to folate receptor alpha or FOLR1 mutations) can be a driver of autism. We also don’t know if CFD can be reliably detected through screening for antibody levels, a method used in some studies.

Autism is a complex condition that can arise from many different factors early in development, though genetic factors play a major role. It’s possible that some children’s autism could be closely tied to CFD or its causes. But that subset, even if it exists, isn’t likely to reach into the hundreds of thousands, according to Shafali Jeste, a behavioral child neurologist.

“Autism is extremely heterogeneous, and it’s a behavioral diagnosis that’s based on thousands of different causes and profiles and brain pathways. So it’s very unlikely we’re going to have one pill that just ubiquitously addresses a core symptom,” says Jeste, who is chair of pediatrics at the University of California, Los Angeles. “And so that’s why I think when medications like leucovorin get touted as this cure or treatment for the core symptoms of autism that works in all kids, it’s problematic.”

Citing the lack of robust evidence, organizations like the American Academy of Pediatrics have recommended against the routine use of leucovorin for autism. But both Jeste and Brumback have encountered families who have asked about the treatment or who are currently using it for their children. Jeste doesn’t prescribe leucovorin herself, while Brumback has stopped issuing new prescriptions since the Trump announcement. But they’re willing to talk to families about the treatment and to support those who decide to use it.

“I will never judge because I think that parents are trying to do right by their children. So it’s very appropriate to wonder about leucovorin and ask,” Jeste says. “I am very open to answering questions and being honest that we just don’t have that evidence right now.”

While leucovorin is generally well-tolerated when used for chemotherapy, it isn’t risk-free either. The AAP notes that it can cause symptoms like vomiting, diarrhea, and alopecia. And there’s at least the possibility that it could have more serious complications when used long-term for autism.

“This is a very specific population of people who are undergoing chemotherapy for cancer. And so there are side effects of taking the vitamins in high doses that we probably wouldn’t notice in that population,” Brumback says, noting that some other forms of vitamin B can cause nerve damage when taken in large doses. “For me, that’s enough to say primum non nocere [Latin for ‘First, do no harm’]. That’s especially true for the kids who are most severe, who can’t communicate if they’re in pain or in discomfort; having something that could potentially cause neuropathy is a nonstarter for me.”

Brumback and Jeste are also both specialists who tend to see patients with more profound autism. And they worry families prescribed leucovorin by general practitioners might be less likely to get proper follow-up and care. Some people could also turn to leucovorin supplements that are far less regulated and could be less safe to consume than the prescription version.

The Future of Autism Treatment: Hope and Hype

One probable reason leucovorin is getting the spotlight from the Trump administration is the lack of other easily adoptable treatments for autism, particularly in the most severe cases. Since taking over HHS, RFK Jr. has promised to deliver new insights into autism while claiming that researchers haven’t done enough to find concrete answers.

Yet there have actually been genuine strides lately in developing effective behavioral interventions for autism that can improve people’s quality of life, Jeste says. Within the next 10 years, she’s even hopeful we will start to develop treatments for severe cases of autism strongly linked to specific genetic mutations.

“The one upside of this whole leucovorin conversation has been that it’s forced us as a medical and scientific community to be more rigorous in how we talk about science, how we talk about what we know, and why we may have skepticism about certain studies,” she says.

In the most likely scenario, leucovorin will follow the example of secretin, a hormone that similarly showed early promise in the 1990s but crashed to the ground when multiple clinical trials failed to validate that promise. If that’s true, then the drug could just end up being a curious footnote in the history of autism research.

That said, RFK Jr. and his allies are already setting the stage for the government to officially endorse his worst pet theories about autism. He’s refused to accept the mainstream consensus that rising rates of reported autism are largely caused by expanded diagnostic criteria and greater awareness, for instance. Last year, he ordered HHS to launch a new study examining the supposed link between vaccines and autism—a link debunked by piles of research conducted over the past several decades.

So even if the hype behind leucovorin isn’t validated and it never becomes widely used, Kennedy may still succeed in further stoking his anti-science agenda.

“I think it’s put parents in a very difficult position because they don’t know who to trust and who to listen to. We have a government saying that we as a medical community are not essentially doing right by our patients. I mean, that is a really hard message to hear,” Jeste says. “So I’m very sympathetic to the uncertainty and confusion that this has created.”

While RFK might profess to have the best interests in mind of people with autism, he seems to have antiquated ideas about the lives they lead. In April 2025, he stated that autism “destroys families” and that children with autism “will never pay taxes, they’ll never hold a job, they’ll never play baseball, they’ll never write a poem, they’ll never go out on a date.”

Of course, plenty of people with autism have and will go on to do all those things. And even for the most severe cases of autism, it’s more often the lack of support, resources, and societal understanding that causes people and their families to suffer greatly than the condition itself. People with autism deserve recognition, respect, and quality care, which includes interventions and treatments strongly supported by evidence. That’s something that Brumback hopes isn’t forgotten in all of this mess.

“To have autism is not to be pitied; it’s not to be seen as something that a family should be embarrassed about—it’s part of life,” she says. “I want that to be the message of positivity; to help people where they’re at and to just have an appreciation for human life.”


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Viral Sentences:

  • “The idea of doing this for everyone—we’re going to see side effects, we’re going to see negative outcomes.”
  • “This is not a strong evidence base. We’re basically still at the anecdote phase.”
  • “Autism is extremely heterogeneous, and it’s a behavioral diagnosis that’s based on thousands of different causes and profiles and brain pathways.”
  • “I will never judge because I think that parents are trying to do right by their children.”
  • “For me, that’s enough to say primum non nocere. That’s especially true for the kids who are most severe, who can’t communicate if they’re in pain or in discomfort.”
  • “The one upside of this whole leucovorin conversation has been that it’s forced us as a medical and scientific community to be more rigorous in how we talk about science.”
  • “I think it’s put parents in a very difficult position because they don’t know who to trust and who to listen to.”
  • “To have autism is not to be pitied; it’s not to be seen as something that a family should be embarrassed about—it’s part of life.”

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