Cystic fibrosis newborn screening: using experience to optimize the screening algorithm

Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease - Tập 33 - Trang 255-261 - 2010
Jaime E. Hale1, Richard B. Parad2, Henry L. Dorkin3, Robert Gerstle4, Allen Lapey5, Brian P. O’Sullivan6, Terry Spencer3, William Yee7, Anne Marie Comeau1,6
1New England Newborn Screening Program, UMass Medical School, Jamaica Plain, USA
2Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, USA
3Children’s Hospital, Boston, USA
4Baystate Medical Center, Springfield, USA
5Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, USA
6Department of Pediatrics, UMass Medical School, Worcester, USA
7Tufts Medical Center, Boston, USA

Tóm tắt

Newborn screening (NBS) for cystic fibrosis (CF) offers the opportunity for early diagnosis and improved outcomes in patients with CF and has been universally available in the state of Massachusetts since 1999 using an immunoreactive trypsinogen (IRT)-DNA algorithm. Ideally, CF NBS is incorporated as part of an integrated NBS system that allows for comprehensive and coordinated education, laboratory screening, clinical follow-up, and evaluation so that evidence-based data can be used to maximize quality improvements and optimize the screening algorithm. The New England Newborn Screening Program (NENSP) retrospectively analyzed Massachusetts’s CF newborn screening data that yielded decisions to eliminate a screen-positive category, maintain the IRT cutoff value that prompts the second tier DNA testing, and communicate CF relative risk to primary care providers (PCPs) based on categorization of positive CF NBS results.

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