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Chapter 11 Newborn Screening
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Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.

Chapter 11

Newborn Screening

Page 2: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.

Introduction

• Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can lead to therapy that prevents severe, long-term medical problems.

• Technological advances are quickly expanding the scope of newborn screening.

• Disorders such as cystic fibrosis as well as endocrine, hematologic, immunologic, neurologic, and infectious disorders are being identified in the newborn period, in addition to inborn errors of metabolism.

Page 3: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.

Introduction cont.

• Screening of newborns for several inborn errors of metabolism is standard throughout the United States and in most of the developed world.

• The rationale is that identification of infants with inborn errors can lead to institution of treatment prior to the onset of clinical signs of the disorder.

• This can prevent otherwise irreversible neurologic damage and other medical problems

Page 4: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.
Page 5: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.
Page 6: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.

Introduction cont.

• The criteria for screening for a particular disorder are as follows: (1) The disorder produces irreversible damage if untreated early in life; (2) treatment prevents the damage but only if begun in the newborn period, when the infant is asymptomatic; (3) the natural history of the disease is known; (4) a suitable screening test is available; (5) facilities for diagnosis and treatment are available.

Page 7: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.

• Children diagnosed with inborn errors of metabolism require lifelong care.

Introduction cont.

Page 8: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.

• There is a wide variety of pathophysiological mechanisms that underlie inborn errors of metabolism.

• These include defects in enzymes and coenzymes, with physiological consequences of product deficiency and/or substrate accumulation.

Introduction cont.

Page 9: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.

• A variety of approaches to the treatment of inborn errors of metabolism are in use or in development, including dietary management, coenzyme supplementation, removal of toxic metabolites, enzyme replacement, and gene therapy.

Introduction cont.

Page 10: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.

Phenylketonuria

• The frequency of PKU is approximately 1 in 10 000 births.

• Prior to the advent of newborn screening and treatment, PKU was one of the most common causes of intellectual disability.

• Children with untreated PKU exhibit profoundly delayed cognitive development. They also tend to have fair hair and skin owing to relative deficiency of melanin (normally derived, in part, from tyrosine).

Page 11: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.

Phenylketonuria • A value greater than 20 mg/dL is indicative of classic PKU. • Some newborns have phenylalanine values in an intermediate

range (7–20 mg/dL), which is indicative of atypical or mild PKU.

• Either form of PKU is treated by reducing phenylalanine intake.

• Elevated levels of less than 7 mg/dL correspond with non-PKU benign hyperphenylalaninemia and require no treatment.

• Benign hyperphenylalaninemia mutations are mis-sense mutations.

• PKU mutations also are usually missense mutations but might be mutations that lead to deficient production of protein (e.g., stop codons, splicing mutations, and deletions)

Page 12: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.
Page 13: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.
Page 14: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.

Phenylketonuria

• An unexpected consequence of PKU is a risk of congenital anomalies in the child of an affected woman due to phenylalanine toxicity if the mother is not maintained on strict dietary control during pregnancy.

Page 15: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.
Page 16: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.
Page 17: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.

Medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (MCADD)

• It is the most common of the fatty acid oxidation disorders and occurs with an estimated incidence of 1 in 10 000 births.

• Patients with fatty acid oxidation disorders generally present clinically during periods of fasting and/or acute illness that result in an increased metabolic rate and energy requirement.

Page 18: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.

Medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (MCADD)

• Unlike PKU, this condition does not require continuous treatment, but only at times of illness or metabolic stress.

• The majority of undiagnosed infants present with lethargy and hypoglycemia between 3 and 12 months of age (once the interval between feedings has lengthened, or nighttime feedings have been discontinued), or during an acute illness associated with decreased oral intake.

• Failure to recognize the signs and symptoms and institute glucose therapy promptly can result in coma and death.

• The ability to tolerate fasting improves with age and growth.

Page 19: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.
Page 20: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.

Lysosomal Storage Disorder

• Another major cellular dysfunction associated with some metabolic disorders is the gradual accumulation of substances within the cell due to hereditary deficiency of enzymes required for their breakdown.

• This occurs in lysosomal storage diseases, in which one or another of the enzymes required to metabolize cell membrane components in the lysosome is missing.

• A hallmark of these disorders is the progressive buildup of membrane debris in the lysosome, leading to progressive loss of cell function. An example of a lysosomal storage disorder is Tay–Sachs disease

Page 21: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.
Page 22: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.

Treatments

• Dietary manipulation.• Alternative system to remove a toxic

substrate. • Organ transplantation.• Enzyme replacement.• Gene therapy protocols have also been tested

on an experimental basis.

Page 23: Chapter 11 Newborn Screening. Introduction Newborns can be screened for an increasing variety of conditions on the principle that early detection can.