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      Improving test properties for neonatal cystic fibrosis screening in the Netherlands before the nationwide start by May 1st 2011

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          Abstract

          When new technical possibilities arise in health care, often attunement is needed between different actors from the perspectives of research, health care providers, patients, ethics and policy. For cystic fibrosis (CF) such a process of attunement in the Netherlands started in a committee of the Health Council on neonatal screening in 2005. In the balancing of pros and cons according to Wilson and Jungner criteria, the advantages for the CF patient were considered clear, even though CF remains a severe health problem with treatment. Nevertheless, screening was not started then, mainly since the specificity of the tests available at that time was considered too low. Many healthy infants would have been referred for sweat testing and much uncertainty would arise in their parents. Also the limited sensitivity for immigrants and the detection of less severe phenotypes and carriers were considered problematic. The Health Council recommended a pilot screening project which was subsequently performed in some provinces, leading to a 4-step protocol: IRT, PAP, screening for a CFTR mutation panel, and sequencing of the CFTR gene. This would lead to the identification of 23 cases of classical CF, two infants with less severe forms and 12 carriers per year in the Netherlands. Thus many CF patients can be diagnosed early, while limiting the number of referrals, the number of infants with less severe forms diagnosed and the number of carriers identified. Technical solutions were found to limit the ethical problems. A nationwide program using this four step protocol started by 1 May 2011.

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          Implementation of preconceptional carrier screening for cystic fibrosis and haemoglobinopathies: a sociotechnical analysis.

          To obtain more insight into the process of potential implementation of a screening program, which aims to identify carriers of cystic fibrosis and haemoglobinopathies before pregnancy, in order to enable couples at high risk of having a child with these disorders, to make informed reproductive decisions. Use of sociotechnical analysis, based on a model of co-evolution between technology and society, and, for comparison, the study of the implementation processes of two already existing health care programs with similar aspects to the screening program at issue. Factors important for success appeared to be the existence of sociotechnical niches, in which technological options can be developed and studied in an experimental setting; a structural approach of providing information to future parents; a party that can articulate demand; governmental involvement in the attunement between various stakeholders; and a screening infrastructure in which large-scale DNA diagnostic services are available. Successful implementation of preconceptional carrier screening for cystic fibrosis and haemoglobinopathies will depend on changes at both regime and landscape level, including the establishment of a new preconceptional health care setting and a clearly visible public health authority which can coordinate, monitor and evaluate such an initiative in public health care.
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            Recoveries of phenylalanine from two sets of dried-blood-spot reference materials: prediction from hematocrit, spot volume, and paper matrix.

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              CFTR mutations in Turkish and North African cystic fibrosis patients in Europe: implications for screening.

              To obtain more insight into the variability of the CFTR mutations found in immigrant cystic fibrosis (CF) patients who are living in Europe now, and to estimate the test sensitivity of different frequently used methods of DNA analysis to detect CF carriers or patients among these Turkish or North African immigrants. A survey among 373 European CF centers asking which CFTR mutations had been found in Turkish and North African CF patients. 31 and 26 different mutations were reported in Turkish and North African patients, identifying 64.2% (113/176) and 87.4% (118/135) alleles, respectively (p < 0.001). The mean sensitivity (detection rate) of three most common CFTR mutation panels to detect these mutations differed between Turkish and North African people, 44.9% (79/176) versus 69.6% (94/135) (p < 0.001), and can be increased to 57.4% (101/176) and 79.3% (107/135) (p < 0.001), respectively, by expanding these panels with 13 mutations which have been found on two or more alleles. 35.8% and 12.6%, respectively, of CF alleles in Turkish and North African patients living in Europe now had not been identified. Among these populations, the test sensitivity of common CFTR mutation panels is insufficient for use in screening programs in Europe, even after expansion with frequent Turkish and North African mutations. This raises questions about whether and how to implement CF carrier and neonatal screening in a multiethnic society.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                +31-20-4448910 , MC.Cornel@vumc.nl
                Journal
                J Inherit Metab Dis
                J. Inherit. Metab. Dis
                Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease
                Springer Netherlands (Dordrecht )
                0141-8955
                1573-2665
                3 February 2012
                3 February 2012
                July 2012
                : 35
                : 4
                : 635-640
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Clinical Genetics, VU University Medical Centre, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
                [2 ]Centre for Society and Genomics, Nijmegen, The Netherlands
                [3 ]Centre for Medical Systems Biology, Leiden, The Netherlands
                [4 ]Laboratory for Infectious Diseases and Perinatal Screening, National Institute for Public Health, Bilthoven, The Netherlands
                [5 ]Department of Pediatrics, Atrium medical centre Parkstad, Heerlen, The Netherlands
                [6 ]Forum Biotechnology and Genetics, The Hague, The Netherlands
                [7 ]EMGO/Clinical Genetics, BS7 D423, VU University Medical Centre, PO Box 7057, 1007 MB Amsterdam, The Netherlands
                Author notes

                Communicated by: Georg Hoffmann

                Article
                9452
                10.1007/s10545-012-9452-7
                3388251
                22302635
                1f302004-01ae-4b71-88f6-78620b1225dd
                © The Author(s) 2012
                History
                : 18 October 2011
                : 17 December 2011
                : 10 January 2012
                Categories
                SSIEM Symposium 2011
                Custom metadata
                © SSIEM and Springer 2012

                Internal medicine
                Internal medicine

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