Newborn screening for severe combined immunodeficiency in 11 screening programs in the United States.

Journal: Jama
Published:
Abstract

Objective: Newborn screening for severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) using assays to detect T-cell receptor excision circles (TRECs) began in Wisconsin in 2008, and SCID was added to the national recommended uniform panel for newborn screened disorders in 2010. Currently 23 states, the District of Columbia, and the Navajo Nation conduct population-wide newborn screening for SCID. The incidence of SCID is estimated at 1 in 100,000 births. Objective: To present data from a spectrum of SCID newborn screening programs, establish population-based incidence for SCID and other conditions with T-cell lymphopenia, and document early institution of effective treatments.

Methods: Epidemiological and retrospective observational study. Methods: Representatives in states conducting SCID newborn screening were invited to submit their SCID screening algorithms, test performance data, and deidentified clinical and laboratory information regarding infants screened and cases with nonnormal results. Infants born from the start of each participating program from January 2008 through the most recent evaluable date prior to July 2013 were included. Representatives from 10 states plus the Navajo Area Indian Health Service contributed data from 3,030,083 newborns screened with a TREC test. Methods: Infants with SCID and other diagnoses of T-cell lymphopenia were classified. Incidence and, where possible, etiologies were determined. Interventions and survival were tracked.

Results: Screening detected 52 cases of typical SCID, leaky SCID, and Omenn syndrome, affecting 1 in 58,000 infants (95% CI, 1/46,000-1/80,000). Survival of SCID-affected infants through their diagnosis and immune reconstitution was 87% (45/52), 92% (45/49) for infants who received transplantation, enzyme replacement, and/or gene therapy. Additional interventions for SCID and non-SCID T-cell lymphopenia included immunoglobulin infusions, preventive antibiotics, and avoidance of live vaccines. Variations in definitions and follow-up practices influenced the rates of detection of non-SCID T-cell lymphopenia.

Conclusions: Newborn screening in 11 programs in the United States identified SCID in 1 in 58,000 infants, with high survival. The usefulness of detection of non-SCID T-cell lymphopenias by the same screening remains to be determined.

Authors
Antonia Kwan, Roshini Abraham, Robert Currier, Amy Brower, Karen Andruszewski, Jordan Abbott, Mei Baker, Mark Ballow, Louis Bartoshesky, Francisco Bonilla, Charles Brokopp, Edward Brooks, Michele Caggana, Jocelyn Celestin, Joseph Church, Anne Comeau, James Connelly, Morton Cowan, Charlotte Cunningham Rundles, Trivikram Dasu, Nina Dave, Maria De La Morena, Ulrich Duffner, Chin-to Fong, Lisa Forbes, Debra Freedenberg, Erwin Gelfand, Jaime Hale, I Hanson, Beverly Hay, Diana Hu, Anthony Infante, Daisy Johnson, Neena Kapoor, Denise Kay, Donald Kohn, Rachel Lee, Heather Lehman, Zhili Lin, Fred Lorey, Aly Abdel Mageed, Adrienne Manning, Sean Mcghee, Theodore Moore, Stanley Naides, Luigi Notarangelo, Jordan Orange, Sung-yun Pai, Matthew Porteus, Ray Rodriguez, Neil Romberg, John Routes, Mary Ruehle, Arye Rubenstein, Carlos Saavedra Matiz, Ginger Scott, Patricia Scott, Elizabeth Secord, Christine Seroogy, William Shearer, Subhadra Siegel, Stacy Silvers, E Stiehm, Robert Sugerman, John Sullivan, Susan Tanksley, Millard Tierce, James Verbsky, Beth Vogel, Rosalyn Walker, Kelly Walkovich, Jolan Walter, Richard Wasserman, Michael Watson, Geoffrey Weinberg, Leonard Weiner, Heather Wood, Anne Yates, Jennifer Puck, Vincent Bonagura