State Newborn Screening in the Tandem Mass Spectrometry Era: More Tests, More False-Positive Results

Author:

Tarini Beth A.12,Christakis Dimitri A.123,Welch H. Gilbert45

Affiliation:

1. Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program

2. Department of Pediatrics

3. Child Health Institute, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington

4. Veterans Affairs Outcomes Group, White River Junction, Vermont

5. Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, New Hampshire

Abstract

BACKGROUND. The advent of tandem mass spectrometry has made it possible to test newborns for multiple conditions efficiently. It is not known how state newborn screening programs have changed screening practices in response to this technology and how it affects the number of false-positive test results. METHODS. We obtained data from the National Newborn Screening and Genetics Resource Center regarding the screening practices for each of the 50 states, to determine the number of mandated disorders added to state newborn screening panels between 1995 and 2005. Combining these data with reported specificities from the literature and the number of births in each state, we estimated the number of infants who would have received false-positive results through screening with tandem mass spectrometry in 2005. RESULTS. The average state mandated screening for 5 disorders in 1995 (range: 0–8 disorders). Wyoming was the only state that decreased its panel size over the next decade. Kansas and Texas were the only states that did not add disorders to their panels between 1995 and 2005; the average state added 19. Iowa, Minnesota, Mississippi, South Dakota, and Tennessee each added ≥40 disorders. Assuming that an individual test for a disorder had a specificity of 99.995%, we estimated that ∼2575 infants would have received false-positive results through screening with tandem mass spectrometry in 2005. If specificity was assumed to be 99.9%, then the number increased to >51000. CONCLUSIONS. State newborn screening programs have expanded dramatically in the past decade. Because the benefit of such testing may be unclear in some cases and because the number of infants who may receive false-positive results and may be labeled falsely as having disease is potentially sizeable, a more cautious approach is needed.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference38 articles.

1. American Academy of Pediatrics, Newborn Screening Task Force. Newborn screening: a blueprint for the future: executive summary: newborn screening task force report. Pediatrics. 2000;106:386–388

2. National Newborn Screening and Genetics Resource Center. National Newborn Screening Status Report, November 2005. Austin, TX: National Newborn Screening and Genetics Resource Center; 2005

3. Millington DS, Kodo N, Norwood DL, Roe CR. Tandem mass spectrometry: a new method for acylcarnitine profiling with potential for neonatal screening for inborn errors of metabolism. J Inherit Metab Dis. 1990;13:321–324

4. Bartlett K, Eaton SJ, Pourfarzam M. New developments in neonatal screening. Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed. 1997;77:F151–F154

5. American College of Medical Genetics, American Society of Human Genetics, Test and Technology Transfer Committee Working Group. Tandem mass spectrometry in newborn screening. Genet Med. 2000;2:267–269

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