Neonatal Screening Flashcards
WHO criteria for good screening tests
- important condition
- acceptable treatment available
- facilities for diagnosis and treatment available
- recognised latent or early symptomatic stage
- suitable test or examination with high specificity and sensitivity
- acceptable to population
- balanced cost
Traditional screening
Guthrie card - bacterial inhibition assay on a filter-paper blood spot (day 5 blood)
- qualitative, analytical variation
Quantitative determination by biochemical assays
Phenylketonuria (PKU): cause, pathogenesis, presentations, treatment, suitability for screening
Very common in western population
Classical PKU = phenylalanine hydroxylase deficiency (phenylalanine to tyrosine)
Other causes of hyperphenylalaninaemia e.g. PTPS (tetrahydrobiopterin deficiency; PAH cofactor)
50:50 in HK
Excessive phenylalanine (5-10x normal) –> phenylketone side products (phenyl lactic acid/phenyl acetic acid) –> excreted in urine
Presentations:
- urine with a smell
- progressive irreversible neurological impairment if untreated (compete with essential a.a. to cross BBB)
- behavioural problems
- severity directly correlates with blood [phenylalanine]
Suitability for screening: dietary treatment would prevent severe mental retardation
Treatment and monitoring:
- dietary restriction of phenylalanine (but adequate)
- BH4 may boost PAH enzyme in some patients
- frequent blood Phe monitoring
(tyrosine supplements, other a.a., vitamins, minerals)
Latest method of screening
Tandem mass spectrometry
- multiple metabolites (a.a. and acylcarnitines) assayed on one single test
- many countries started in early 2000s but HK only start in 2017
> 30 metabolic defects can be detected (FAOD e.g. MCAD, a.a. metabolic pathways e.g. PKU, organic aciduria e.g. GAI)
NBS for IEMs: Day 2 heel prick dried blood spot (previously use umbilical cord blood in HK)
–> in HK, very successful use of cord blood (efficient and economical) but not suitable for most inherited metabolic disease
Other methods:
- enzyme analysis e.g. galactosaemia
- immunoassay e.g. 17-OH progesterone for CAH
Cord blood vs Dried blood spot
Cord blood
- taken at birth
- detects enzymes
- doesn’t detect metabolites (cleared by mother)
- detects DNA
Dried blood spot
- taken 2-3 days after birth (baby started own metabolic)
- detects enzymes, metabolites and DNA
Other ongoing screening using umbilical cord blood: diseases and their manifestations, management
Congenital hypothyroidism
- defect in thyroid gland development
- most common preventable cause of mental retardation (1/4000)
- measure TSH, fT4 – TSH>15 mIU/L at cutoff (repeat on day 5)
- early (at 1-2 mths) and adequate T4 replacement = normal cognitive development
- follow up tests (re-evaluate at 3 yrs)
Glucose-6-Phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency
- X linked
- screening: measure enzyme activity (can’t detect all heterozygous females)
- 4.5% males, 0.3% females
- neonatal hyperbilirubinaemia due to haemolysis (kernicterus), food/drug/infection induced acute haemolysis, chronic haemolysis
- mostly asymptomatic throughout life (if not exposure to excessive oxidant stress)
- Mx: treat neonatal jaundice and haemolysis; avoidance unsafe drugs/chemicals e.g. naphthalene balls, beans, Chinese herbs; dietary restriction