Department of Pediatrics, Laboratory for Pediatric Immunology, Willem-Alexander Children's Hospital, Leiden University Medical Center, Albinusdreef 2, 2333 ZA, Leiden, the Netherlands.
Centre for Health Protection, National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, Bilthoven, the Netherlands.
J Clin Immunol. 2021 Nov;41(8):1762-1773. doi: 10.1007/s10875-021-01107-2. Epub 2021 Aug 9.
Newborn screening (NBS) for severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) is based on the detection of T-cell receptor excision circles (TRECs). TRECs are a sensitive biomarker for T-cell lymphopenia, but not specific for SCID. This creates a palette of secondary findings associated with low T-cells that require follow-up and treatment or are non-actionable. The high rate of (non-actionable) secondary findings and false-positive referrals raises questions about the harm-benefit-ratio of SCID screening, as referrals are associated with high emotional impact and anxiety for parents.
An alternative quantitative TREC PCR with different primers was performed on NBS cards of referred newborns (N = 56) and epigenetic immune cell counting was used as for relative quantification of CD3 + T-cells (N = 59). Retrospective data was used to determine the reduction in referrals with a lower TREC cutoff value or an adjusted screening algorithm.
When analyzed with a second PCR with different primers, 45% of the referrals (25/56) had TREC levels above cutoff, including four false-positive cases in which two SNPs were identified. With epigenetic qPCR, 41% (24/59) of the referrals were within the range of the relative CD3 + T-cell counts of the healthy controls. Lowering the TREC cutoff value or adjusting the screening algorithm led to lower referral rates but did not prevent all false-positive referrals.
Second tier tests and adjustments of cutoff values or screening algorithms all have the potential to reduce the number of non-actionable secondary findings in NBS for SCID, although second tier tests are more effective in preventing false-positive referrals.
新生儿筛查(NBS)用于严重联合免疫缺陷(SCID),其基础是检测 T 细胞受体切除环(TREC)。TREC 是 T 细胞淋巴细胞减少症的敏感生物标志物,但不具有 SCID 的特异性。这就产生了一系列与低 T 细胞相关的次要发现,这些发现需要随访和治疗,或者是无需采取行动的。高比例的(无需采取行动的)次要发现和假阳性转诊引发了对 SCID 筛查的危害-效益比的质疑,因为转诊与父母的高情绪影响和焦虑有关。
对转诊的新生儿(N=56)的 NBS 卡进行了另一种使用不同引物的定量 TRECs PCR,并用表观遗传免疫细胞计数作为 CD3+T 细胞的相对定量(N=59)。回顾性数据用于确定降低 TREC 截止值或调整筛查算法后转诊率的变化。
当使用不同引物的第二种 PCR 进行分析时,45%的转诊(25/56)TREC 水平超过截止值,其中包括两个 SNP 被识别的四个假阳性病例。用表观遗传 qPCR,41%的转诊(24/59)在健康对照的相对 CD3+T 细胞计数范围内。降低 TREC 截止值或调整筛查算法会降低转诊率,但不能防止所有假阳性转诊。
二级测试以及截止值或筛查算法的调整都有可能降低 SCID NBS 中的非行动性次要发现数量,尽管二级测试在预防假阳性转诊方面更有效。