Neonatal Screening for Rare IEM Flashcards

1
Q

What is screened in neonatal screening in the UK?

A
  • Phenylketonuria
  • MCAD deficiency
  • MSUD
  • IVA
  • GA1
  • Hcys
  • Hypothyroidism
  • Cystic fibrosis
  • Sickle disease
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2
Q

What are benefits and limitations of Biochemical Screening by TMS?

A

Has the potential to detect more than 60 IEM

  • Amino acid disorders
  • Fatty acid oxidation defects
  • Organic acidaemias

Constraints and considerations

  • Difficult to use screening experience of other countries
  • Different genetic background
  • Positive predictive value will vary
  • Screening can occur at different days of life
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3
Q

What is the screening strategy for Rare IEM neonatal screening?

A
  • In order to minimise harm to families from false positive screening results a two-tier strategy for most conditions has been developed.
  • 2nd tier additional test on original bloodspot card
  • Need to be available quickly for condition with acute presentation
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4
Q

What is MSUD?

A

Maple Syrup Urine Disease: Defect in branched chain 2-keto acid dehydrogenase complex

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5
Q

What are clinical effects of MSUD?

A

The majority (75-80%) have the classical disease, presenting during the neonatal period:

  • Encephalopathy
  • Cerebral oedema
  • Poor feeding
  • Ketoacidosis
  • Seizures
  • Burnt sugar odour
  • A rarer intermediate form is associated with failure to thrive, often no ketoacidosis but developmental delay
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6
Q

What is the prevelance and screening target for MSUD?

A
  • Prevalance: About 1:120,000
  • Screening target: Leucine
  • Second tier test: Alloisoleucine
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7
Q

What is the treatment for MSUD?

A
  • Low leucine diet
  • Similar to PKU, specialist foods low in leucine for most protein intake
  • Encephalopathy risk
    • Careful plasma amino acid monitoring
    • Emergency regime
    • Dialysis may be necessary sometimes
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8
Q

What is Isovaleric acidaemia?

A

Isovaleric acidaemia: Deficiency of isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenase involved in leucine catabolism.

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9
Q

What are clinical effects of Isovaleric acidaemia?

A
  • Acute neonatal presentations in the first two weeks of life. Infants are initially well, then develop vomiting and lethargy, progressing to coma.
  • Acute presentations at a later age, usually precipitated by an infection.
  • Chronic intermittent presentations, failure to thrive and/or developmental delay, usually within the first year.
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10
Q

What is the prevelance and screening target for Isovaleric Acidaemia?

A
  • Prevalance: about 1:150,000
  • Screening target: isovaleryl carnitine
  • Second Tier test: TMS assay specific for C5 carnitine, to exclude 2 methyl butyryl carnitine or pivaloyl carnitine which are isobaric compounds. IT is not used as much
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11
Q

What is the treatment of IVA?

A
  • Low protein diet
  • Risk of acute metabolic decompensation so Ammonia monitoring and emergency regime, additional calorific support
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12
Q

What is Pivaloylcarnitine?

A
  • Pivaloylcarnitine is isobaric with isovalerylcarnitine
  • Known and documented cause of interference with TMS assays
  • Exogenous compound, 2 common sources of exposure
  • Pivaloylcarnitine can be chromatographically separated from isovalerylcarnitine, 2-methylbutyrylcarnitine and valerylcarnitine (C5 isobars)
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13
Q

What are 2 common sources of Pivaloylcarnitine?

A

Pivalic ester pro drugs

  • Includes antibiotics such as Pivmecillinam

Some Nipple creams contains pivalate derivatives as emollient

  • Appear to be the lanolin free creams eg Mustela nursing balm
  • Listed in ingredients as ‘neopentanoate’ or ‘isodecylneopentanoate’
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14
Q

What is the second tier test for IVA?

A
  • Inclusion of C5 isobars as a second tier test on the original blood spot sample would have prevented the unnecessary referral of 14 babies between July 2012 and Jan 2017
  • Simple test to set up – report as % of total C5
  • Challenge would be ensuring continued competency due to infrequent nature of test and would lead to delay in referral, could be a problem at weekends
  • Recent evidence indicates that babies with false positive screening results have an increased parental stress index score, increased number of hospital admissions and significant and lasting increase in parental anxiety
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15
Q

What is Glutaric Aciduria 1 (GA1)?

A

Deficiency of Glutaryl-CoA Dehydrogenase which is involved in lysine catabolism

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16
Q

What are clinical effects of Glutaric aciduria 1 (GA1)?

A
  • About 70% of patients have an encephalopathic crisis, most commonly at around 9 months, with 90% by age 2 years precipitated by a non-specific intercurrent illness, gastrointestinal infection or pneumonia.
  • Leads to dystonia and dyskinesia as permanent sequelae.
  • Can cause frontal lobe atrophy in the brain
17
Q

What is the outcome of Glutaric aciduria 1?

A
  • Of symptomatically diagnosed patients about 50% die before the age of 25 years.
  • Survivors usually have severe handicap. But the risk of acute crises and neurological damage decreases markedly after the age of six years.
18
Q

What is the prevelance and screening target of Glutaryl Aciduria 1?

A
  • Prevalance: about 1:100,000
  • Screening target: Glutaryl Carnitine
  • No second tier test
19
Q

What is an extrame presentation of GA1?

A
  • Patients with GA1 can present with sub dural haemorrhage, and may have retinal haemorrhage
  • Potential for confusion with physical abuse
  • Take note of macrocephaly and cortical atrophy if MRI available
  • Be aware that some GA1 patients are ‘non-secretors’
20
Q

What is Homocystinuria?

A
  • Classical” homocystinuria is a defect in β-Cystathionine Synthase
  • Pyridoxine responsive and pyridoxine unresponsive forms, in the UK 50% of patients are in each group
21
Q

What are clinical effects of Homocystinuria?

A
  • Usually healthy at birth, the diagnosis is not usually made until the first 2-3 years of life.
  • Myopia followed by dislocation of the lens
  • Osteoporosis,
  • Thinning and lengthening of the long bones
  • Mental retardation and thromboembolism

Without treatment, 25% of patients will die before the age of 30, usually due to thromboembolism

22
Q

What is prevalance and screening target of Homocystinuria?

A
  • Prevalance: About 1:150,000 , this is the generally accepted worldwide figure. Likely to be higher in UK (esp The North) due to “Celtic Gene’
  • Screening Target: Methionine. Methionine is not raised in the Pyridoxine responsive forms
  • Second Tier: Total homocysteine
23
Q

How does the plasma level affect the measurement of urine excretion?

A
  • Homocystine does not appear in the urine until plasma total homocysteine exceeds 150 umol/L (ref <15)
  • Urine analysis is less sensitive at detecting disordered metabolism
24
Q

What is the Natural Hisotry of Classical Homocystinuria?

A
  • Lens dislocation: 82% dislocated by age 10 years
  • Osteoporosis (x-ray): 64% with osteoporosis by age 15 yrs
  • Vascular events: 27% had an event by age 15 years
  • Death: 23% will not survive to age 30 years
  • Mental Retardation – approx 50%