Screening Flashcards

1
Q

What is screening?

A

A process of identifying apparently healthy people who may be at increased risk of a disease or condition. They can then be offered information, further tests and appropriate treatment to reduce their risk and/or any complications arising from the disease or condition.”

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2
Q

What are potential negative effects of screening?

A

Anxiety, stigma, false reassurance

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3
Q

What is Wilson’s Criteria for any screening test?

A
  1. Condition should be an important health problem
  2. The natural history of the condition should be understood
  3. There should be a recognisable latent or early symptomatic stage
  4. There should be a test that is easy to perform and interpret, acceptable, accurate, reliable, sensitive and specific
  5. There should be an accepted treatment recognised for the disease
  6. Treatment should be more effective if started early
  7. There should be a policy on who should be treated
  8. Diagnosis and treatment should be cost-effective
  9. Case-finding should be a continuous process
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4
Q

What is screened for in antenatal period?

A
  1. Infectious diseases (HIV, Hep B, Syphilis, Rubella)
  2. Rhesus negative
  3. Haemoglobinopathies (sickle cell, thalassaemia)
  4. Foetal anomalies
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5
Q

Who may also need to be screened?

A

The partner

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6
Q

When does Rhesus disease occur?

A
  1. Mother has RhD- blood
  2. Baby in womb has RHD+ve blood –> Rh antigens can enter mother’s blood from baby during delivery
  3. Mother responds to RhD+ve blood by producing antibodies
  4. Mother becomes pregnant again with another RhD+ve foetus
  5. Antibodies cross placenta and destroy foetal RBCs
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7
Q

What are all RhD-ve women offered?

A

Anti-D injection at 28-30 weeks

It neutralises fetal Rh D + antigens which would have entered maternal blood and prevents creation of antibodies

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8
Q

What is given if baby is RhD+ve after delivery?

A

Another injection of anti-D

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9
Q

What scans are offered to check for foetal anomaly?

A
  1. Down’s Syndrome screening

2. Anomaly scan

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10
Q

What is the Down’s Syndrome screening?

A
  • Opt-in
  • Done in 1st trimester at dating scan

‘Combined screening’ consists of a nuchal translucency scan and blood test for:

  1. hCG (Human chorionic gonadotrophin)
  2. PAPP-A (pregnancy-associated plasma protein A)§
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11
Q

How are results presented from Down’s screening?

A

Come as a ‘risk factor’ and cut-off is 1 in 150

2% of women will get ‘high risk result’

Detection rate should be 90%

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12
Q

When result from Down’s screening is ‘high risk’, what are mothers offered?

A

Definitive pre-natal diagnosis

  1. CVS from 11 weeks with risk of miscarriage of 1%
  2. Amniocentesis from 15 weeks with risk of 0.8%
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13
Q

What difficult situation can Down’s screening lead to?

A

Termination or not

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14
Q

What is amniocentesis?

A

Removing and testing a small sample of cells from amniotic fluid

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15
Q

What is CVS?

A

Chorionic villus sampling (CVS) is a test offered during pregnancy to check if your baby has a genetic or chromosomal condition

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16
Q

What diseases are not routinely screened for?

A
  1. Hep C
  2. Chylamydia
  3. Group B Strep (unless swab/urine tests are performed)
17
Q

When might Hep C screening be offered?

A

History of drug abuse of obstetric cholestacis

18
Q

What is obstetric cholestacis?

A

A disorder that affects your liver during pregnancy. This causes a build-up of bile acids in your body. The main symptom is itching of the skin but there is no skin rash