Screening Flashcards
What is screening?
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.”
What are potential negative effects of screening?
Anxiety, stigma, false reassurance
What is Wilson’s Criteria for any screening test?
- Condition should be an important health problem
- The natural history of the condition should be understood
- There should be a recognisable latent or early symptomatic stage
- There should be a test that is easy to perform and interpret, acceptable, accurate, reliable, sensitive and specific
- There should be an accepted treatment recognised for the disease
- Treatment should be more effective if started early
- There should be a policy on who should be treated
- Diagnosis and treatment should be cost-effective
- Case-finding should be a continuous process
What is screened for in antenatal period?
- Infectious diseases (HIV, Hep B, Syphilis, Rubella)
- Rhesus negative
- Haemoglobinopathies (sickle cell, thalassaemia)
- Foetal anomalies
Who may also need to be screened?
The partner
When does Rhesus disease occur?
- Mother has RhD- blood
- Baby in womb has RHD+ve blood –> Rh antigens can enter mother’s blood from baby during delivery
- Mother responds to RhD+ve blood by producing antibodies
- Mother becomes pregnant again with another RhD+ve foetus
- Antibodies cross placenta and destroy foetal RBCs
What are all RhD-ve women offered?
Anti-D injection at 28-30 weeks
It neutralises fetal Rh D + antigens which would have entered maternal blood and prevents creation of antibodies
What is given if baby is RhD+ve after delivery?
Another injection of anti-D
What scans are offered to check for foetal anomaly?
- Down’s Syndrome screening
2. Anomaly scan
What is the Down’s Syndrome screening?
- Opt-in
- Done in 1st trimester at dating scan
‘Combined screening’ consists of a nuchal translucency scan and blood test for:
- hCG (Human chorionic gonadotrophin)
- PAPP-A (pregnancy-associated plasma protein A)§
How are results presented from Down’s screening?
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%
When result from Down’s screening is ‘high risk’, what are mothers offered?
Definitive pre-natal diagnosis
- CVS from 11 weeks with risk of miscarriage of 1%
- Amniocentesis from 15 weeks with risk of 0.8%
What difficult situation can Down’s screening lead to?
Termination or not
What is amniocentesis?
Removing and testing a small sample of cells from amniotic fluid
What is CVS?
Chorionic villus sampling (CVS) is a test offered during pregnancy to check if your baby has a genetic or chromosomal condition