Kinsella Suzannah, Hopkins Henrietta, Cooper Lauren, Bonham James R
Hopkins Van Mill, 6 Deans Yard, London SW1P 3NP, UK.
NHS England & NHS Improvement, Wellington House, 133-155 Waterloo Road, London SE1 8UG, UK.
Int J Neonatal Screen. 2022 May 9;8(2):32. doi: 10.3390/ijns8020032.
Cystic fibrosis (CF) has been included within the UK national newborn screening programme since 2007. The approach uses measures of immunoreactive trypsin (IRT) in dried blood spot samples obtained at day 5 of life. Samples which reveal IRT results >99.5th centile go on to be tested for a limited panel of CF mutations. While the programme works well and achieves a high level of sensitivity and specificity, it relies upon repeat testing in some cases and identifies probable carriers, both potentially provoking parental anxiety. In addition, the limited CF mutation panel may not fully reflect the ethnic diversity within the UK population. The use of wider genomic screening, made possible by next-generation sequencing to replace more limited panels, can be used to avoid these shortcomings. However, the way in which this approach is employed can either be designed to maximise specificity by limiting reporting to combinations of known pathogenic mutations or can maximise sensitivity by also reporting combinations of pathogenic mutations together with variants of uncertain significance. The latter approach also increases the number of Cystic Fibrosis Screen-Positive Inconclusive Diagnosis (CFSPID) designations reported, resulting in uncertainty for parents. To help consider the design of the programme, a dialogue was commissioned by the UK National Screening Committee (UKNSC) to elicit the views of members of the public without direct experience of CF, to determine if there was a preference for maximising the sensitivity or the specificity of CF screening. The participants initially expressed a clear preference to maximise sensitivity and avoid missing CF cases, but after time to reflect and consider the implications of their choice, a number changed their views so as to tolerate some missed cases if this resulted in greater certainty of outcome; this became the majority view. It is proposed that it may be a generalisable finding that the public, when facing whole-population screening programmes, may require significant time and information to inform and make their choices and may attach great importance to clarity and certainty of outcome in the screening process.
自2007年起,囊性纤维化(CF)被纳入英国国家新生儿筛查项目。该方法采用出生第5天采集的干血斑样本中的免疫反应性胰蛋白酶(IRT)检测指标。IRT结果高于第99.5百分位数的样本将进一步检测一组有限的CF突变。虽然该项目运行良好,具有较高的灵敏度和特异性,但在某些情况下需要重复检测,且会识别出可能的携带者,这两者都可能引发家长的焦虑。此外,有限的CF突变检测组可能无法充分反映英国人口的种族多样性。通过下一代测序实现的更广泛的基因组筛查可用于取代更有限的检测组,从而避免这些缺点。然而,采用这种方法的方式可以设计为通过将报告限制在已知致病突变的组合上来最大化特异性,或者通过同时报告致病突变组合以及意义未明的变异来最大化灵敏度。后一种方法还会增加报告的囊性纤维化筛查阳性诊断不确定(CFSPID)病例数量,给家长带来不确定性。为了帮助考虑该项目的设计,英国国家筛查委员会(UKNSC)发起了一场对话,以征求没有CF直接经验的公众成员的意见,以确定他们更倾向于最大化CF筛查的灵敏度还是特异性。参与者最初明确表示倾向于最大化灵敏度并避免漏诊CF病例,但经过一段时间的思考并考虑其选择的影响后,一些人改变了观点,即如果这样能带来更大的结果确定性,他们愿意容忍一些漏诊病例;这成为了多数人的观点。有人提出,这可能是一个普遍适用的发现,即公众在面对全人群筛查项目时,可能需要大量时间和信息来做出选择,并且可能非常重视筛查过程中结果的清晰度和确定性。