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Raising awareness of false positive newborn screening results arising from pivalate-containing creams and antibiotics in Europe when screening for isovaleric acidaemia

Authors :
Bonham, James R.
Carling, Rachel S.
Lindner, Martin
Franzson, Leifur
Zetterstrom, Rolf
Boemer, Francois
Cerone, Roberto
Eyskens, Francois
Vilarinho, Laura
Hougaard, David Michael
Schielen, Peter C. J. I.
Bonham, James R.
Carling, Rachel S.
Lindner, Martin
Franzson, Leifur
Zetterstrom, Rolf
Boemer, Francois
Cerone, Roberto
Eyskens, Francois
Vilarinho, Laura
Hougaard, David Michael
Schielen, Peter C. J. I.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

While the early and asymptomatic recognition of treatable conditions offered by newborn screening confers clear health benefits for the affected child, the clinical referral of patients with screen positive results can cause significant harm for some families. The use of pivalate-containing antibiotics and more recently the inclusion of neopentanoate as a component within moisturising creams used as nipple balms by nursing mothers can result in a significant number of false positive results when screening for isovaleric acidaemia (IVA) by measuring C5 acylcarnitine. A recent survey conducted within centres from nine countries indicated that this form of contamination had been or was a significant confounding factor in the detection of IVA in seven of the nine who responded. In three of these seven the prominent cause was believed to derive from the use of moisturising creams and in another three from antibiotics containing pivalate; one country reported that the cause was mixed. As a result, four of these seven centres routinely perform second tier testing to resolve C5 isobars when an initial C5 result is elevated, and a fifth is considering making this change within their national programme. The use of creams containing neopentanoate by nursing mothers and evolving patterns in the prescription of pivalate-containing antibiotics during pregnancy require those involved in the design and operation of newborn screening programmes used to detect IVA and the doctors who receive clinical referrals from these programmes to maintain an awareness of the potential impact of this form of interference on patient results.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1362808819
Document Type :
Electronic Resource