I would say most people I work with are on the spectrum somewhere, myself included. We have to be to deal with the roles we have.
Add in a bit of pressure, and it generally makes for quite entertaining daily conf calls... ...as long as its not me on a rant, moreso because I tend to be 100% honest, and care not who gets offended with my bluntness.
I suspect if I was at school now, they would have picked up my dyslexia (eff me, spelt that right first time), my colour blindness, my OCD, my difficulties interacting with people I don't know, my embarrassing honesty over what I'm thinking, and so on. Fortunately, such titles hadn't been invented back then - and I think today some of these diagnosis is detrimental to the patient, as it not only gives them excuses, but parents etc start making excuses for them. IMHO of course.
After all is said and done, despite being, as expected, the target of much bullying and general nastiness, I think I turned out reasonably alright.