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Cystic Fibrosis-Screening Positive Inconclusive Diagnosis: Newborn Screening and Long-Term Follow-Up Permits to Early Identify Patients with CFTR-Related Disorders.

Authors :
Castaldo A
Cimbalo C
Castaldo RJ
D'Antonio M
Scorza M
Salvadori L
Sepe A
Raia V
Tosco A
Source :
Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) [Diagnostics (Basel)] 2020 Aug 08; Vol. 10 (8). Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Aug 08.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background: Newborn screening (NBS) early-identifies cystic fibrosis (CF), but in CF-screening positive inconclusive diagnosis (CF-SPID) the results of immunoreactive trypsinogen (IRT), molecular analysis and sweat test (ST) are discordant. A percentage of CF-SPID evolves to CF, but data on long-term monitoring are lacking. We describe the follow-up of all CF and CF-SPID identified between 2008 and 2019.<br />Methods: NBS was performed by IRT followed by molecular analysis and ST between 2008 and 2014; double IRT followed by molecular analysis and ST after 2014.<br />Results: NBS revealed 47 CF and 99 CF-SPID newborn, a ratio 1:2.1-the highest reported so far. This depends on the identification by gene sequencing of the second variant with undefined effect in 40 CF-SPID that otherwise would have been defined as carriers. Clinical complications and pulmonary infections occurred more frequently among CF patients than among CF-SPID. Two CF-SPID cases evolved to CF (at two years), while eight evolved to CFTR-related disorders (CFTR-RD), between one and eight years, with bronchiectasis (two), recurrent pneumonia (four, two with sinonasal complications), recurrent pancreatitis (two). No clinical, biochemical or imaging data predicted the evolution.<br />Conclusion: Gene sequencing within the NBS reveals a higher number of CF-SPID and we first describe an approach to early identify CFTR-RD, with relevant impact on their outcome.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2075-4418
Volume :
10
Issue :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32784480
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics10080570