Wener Emily R, Cushing Sharon L, Papsin Blake C, Stavropoulos Dimitrios J, Mendoza-Londono Roberto, Quercia Nada, Gordon Karen A
Archie's Cochlear Implant Laboratory, Neuroscience & Mental Health, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, University of Toronto, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2025 Jun;172(6):2082-2089. doi: 10.1002/ohn.1188. Epub 2025 Feb 26.
To assess the added benefit of newborn genetic screening for GJB2 and SLC26A4 variants in conjunction with newborn hearing screening.
Retrospective cohort study.
Children with known variants of GJB2 and SLC26A4 were identified from 485 children with hearing loss who underwent testing with Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) between January 2015 and February 2018, prior to expanded screening for genetic variants and congenital CMV. Children with two pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants of GJB2 or SLC26A4 were considered to have genetic hearing loss. NGS genetic data were compared to variants included in the expanded genetic screen for all newborns in Ontario and newborn hearing screening results.
Canadian tertiary pediatric hospital.
Thirty-five children with GJB2 and SLC26A4-associated hearing loss were identified by NGS (n = 27 GJB2-HL; n = 8 SLC26A4-HL). Of these, 20 (57%) had been identified by newborn hearing screening (14/27 52% GJB2-HL; 6/8 75% SLC26A4-HL). Ten of the 20 (50%) would also have been identified by genetic screening if it had been available (9/14 64% GJB2-HL; 1/6 17% SLC26A4-HL). An additional 8 children with GJB2 or SLC26A4-associated hearing loss passed their newborn hearing screen but showed hearing loss later; three of these children (38%) would have been identified by newborn genetic screening (3/6 GJB2-HL; 0/2 SLC26A4-HL).
Genetic and hearing screening modalities in Ontario's expanded newborn hearing screening program improve early identification of children with hearing loss including those at risk of being missed by hearing screening alone. This was most clear for children with GJB2-hearing loss.
评估新生儿基因筛查GJB2和SLC26A4变异体结合新生儿听力筛查的附加益处。
回顾性队列研究。
从2015年1月至2018年2月期间接受下一代测序(NGS)检测的485名听力损失儿童中,确定携带GJB2和SLC26A4已知变异体的儿童,这些检测在扩大基因变异体和先天性巨细胞病毒筛查之前进行。携带两个GJB2或SLC26A4致病或可能致病变异体的儿童被视为患有遗传性听力损失。将NGS基因数据与安大略省所有新生儿扩大基因筛查中包含的变异体以及新生儿听力筛查结果进行比较。
加拿大三级儿科医院。
通过NGS鉴定出35名患有GJB2和SLC26A4相关听力损失的儿童(n = 27例GJB2 - HL;n = 8例SLC26A4 - HL)。其中,20名(57%)已通过新生儿听力筛查确诊(14/27例GJB2 - HL,占52%;6/8例SLC26A4 - HL,占75%)。如果进行基因筛查,这20名中的10名(50%)也会被确诊(9/14例GJB2 - HL,占64%;1/6例SLC26A4 - HL,占17%)。另外8名患有GJB2或SLC26A4相关听力损失的儿童通过了新生儿听力筛查,但后来出现听力损失;其中3名儿童(38%)可通过新生儿基因筛查确诊(3/6例GJB2 - HL;0/2例SLC26A4 - HL)。
安大略省扩大的新生儿听力筛查计划中的基因和听力筛查模式可改善听力损失儿童的早期识别,包括那些仅通过听力筛查可能被漏诊的儿童。这在患有GJB2听力损失的儿童中最为明显。