Developments and improvements in the application of tandem mass spectrometry for newborn screening of inherited metabolic diseases using dried blood specimens have been ongoing since the initial work with fast atom bombardment ionization tandem mass spectrometry for phenylketonuria and other amino a
Pilot programs in newborn screening
✍ Scribed by Pass, Kenneth ;Green, Nancy S. ;Lorey, Fred ;Sherwin, John ;Comeau, Anne Marie
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 126 KB
- Volume
- 12
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1080-4013
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
The term “pilot study” has been used over the years to describe the evaluation of the many elements involved in deciding whether a proposed condition should be added to a newborn screening (NBS) panel, and until recently, was unilaterally used to describe the evaluation of the assay to be used before the condition was officially adopted by a state for its newborn screening panel. Since Guthrie's introduction of screening for PKU, each time a new condition was added to the panel, the screening assay itself was validated through a population‐based trial, in which the test was performed with de‐identified samples to avoid association between the test result and the infant. This is considered by the laboratory as the “pilot phase” of adding a new condition. To advance the science of NBS, especially to accommodate new technologies that may provide new types of information (genetic versus physiological) for each new condition, pilot programs are essential. Involvement of the clinical community serves to improve these evaluations and provides the needed clinical validation of decisions made as a result of it. This paper describes the historical context of pilot programs in population‐based NBS that utilize laboratory‐based markers as indicators of concern; specifically, three applications that demonstrate different approaches to the use of pilots in adding conditions to a NBS panel are described. © 2006 Wiley‐Liss, Inc. MRDD Research Reviews 2006;12:293–300.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Newborn screening is considered a highly successful public health program that has resulted in the reduction of mortality, mental retardation, and other serious disabilities in thousands of children since the introduction of screening for phenylketonuria (PKU) in the 1960s. Programs are
We have retrospectively analyzed 837 random anonymized dried blood spot (DBS) samples from neonatal screening programs in Scandinavia for mutations in HFE, the candidate gene for hemochromatosis. We have found C282Y allele frequencies of 2.3% (+2.0%) (-1.3%) in Greenland, 4.5%+/-1.9% in Iceland, 5.1
## Abstract Recent changes in genetics research have created new opportunities to improve the scope and quality of newborn screening services. Changes in newborn screening should be supported and directed by an organized program of research. The NICHD Research Initiative in Newborn Screening includ