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1.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab ; 106(11): e4487-e4496, 2021 10 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34171085

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: Newborn screening (NBS) for classic congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) consists of 17-hydroxyprogesterone (17-OHP) measurement with gestational age-adjusted cutoffs. A second heel puncture (HP) is performed in newborns with inconclusive results to reduce false positives. OBJECTIVE: We assessed the accuracy and turnaround time of the current CAH NBS algorithm in comparison with alternative algorithms by performing a second-tier 21-deoxycortisol (21-DF) pilot study. METHODS: Dried blood spots (DBS) of newborns with inconclusive and positive 17-OHP (immunoassay) first HP results were sent from regional NBS laboratories to the Amsterdam UMC Endocrine Laboratory. In 2017-2019, 21-DF concentrations were analyzed by LC-MS/MS in parallel with routine NBS. Diagnoses were confirmed by mutation analysis. RESULTS: A total of 328 DBS were analyzed; 37 newborns had confirmed classic CAH, 33 were false-positive and 258 were categorized as negative in the second HP following the current algorithm. With second-tier testing, all 37 confirmed CAH had elevated 21-DF, while all 33 false positives and 253/258 second-HP negatives had undetectable 21-DF. The elevated 21-DF of the other 5 newborns may be NBS false negatives or second-tier false positives. Adding the second-tier results to inconclusive first HPs reduced the number of false positives to 11 and prevented all 286 second HPs. Adding the second tier to both positive and inconclusive first HPs eliminated all false positives but delayed referral for 31 CAH patients (1-4 days). CONCLUSION: Application of the second-tier 21-DF measurement to inconclusive first HPs improved our CAH NBS by reducing false positives, abolishing the second HP, and thereby shortening referral time.


Subject(s)
17-alpha-Hydroxyprogesterone/blood , Adrenal Hyperplasia, Congenital/diagnosis , Cortodoxone/blood , Neonatal Screening/methods , Pilot Projects , Adrenal Hyperplasia, Congenital/blood , Algorithms , False Positive Reactions , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Netherlands , Sensitivity and Specificity
2.
Eur J Neurol ; 28(5): 1665-1676, 2021 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33342004

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Recent studies suggest a relationship between the APOE ε4 allele and cognitive outcome in patients treated for malignant brain tumors. Still, longitudinal investigations that include a pretreatment cognitive assessment are lacking and APOE's effects in patients with benign tumors are understudied. This study investigated presurgical cognitive performance and postsurgical change in ε4-carrying and non-carrying patients with glioma and meningioma. METHODS: Neuropsychological test scores (CNS Vital Signs battery [seven measures], Digit Span Forward/Backward, Letter Fluency test) were obtained as part of a prospective study in which patients with meningioma and glioma underwent cognitive assessment 1 day before (T0, n = 505) and 3 (T3, n = 418) and 12 months after (T12, n = 167) surgery. APOE isoforms were identified retrospectively. ε4 carriers and non-carriers were compared with regard to pretreatment cognitive performance on the group and individual level. Changes in performances over time were compared with longitudinal mixed model analysis in the total sample and the subgroup receiving adjuvant treatment. RESULTS: Carriers and non-carriers did not differ with regard to pretreatment performance. No significant main effect of ε4 carrier status or interaction between time (T0-T12) and carrier status was found on any of the tests in the whole sample nor in the sample receiving adjuvant treatment. CONCLUSIONS: This study found no evidence of increased vulnerability for pretreatment cognitive dysfunction or cognitive decline within 1 year after surgery in APOE ε4-carrying meningioma and glioma patients. Investigations that include larger samples at longer-term follow-up are recommended to investigate potential late treatment effects.


Subject(s)
Apolipoprotein E4 , Brain Neoplasms , Alleles , Apolipoprotein E4/genetics , Brain Neoplasms/genetics , Brain Neoplasms/surgery , Cognition , Genotype , Humans , Neuropsychological Tests , Prospective Studies , Retrospective Studies
3.
JIMD Rep ; 54(1): 68-78, 2020 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32685353

ABSTRACT

Maple syrup urine disease (MSUD) leads to severe neurological deterioration unless diagnosed early and treated immediately. We have evaluated the effectiveness of 11 years of MSUD newborn screening (NBS) in the Netherlands (screening >72 hours, referral if both total leucine (Xle) and valine ≥400 µmol/L blood) and have explored possibilities for improvement by combining our data with a systematic literature review and data from Collaborative Laboratory Integrated Reports (CLIR). Dutch MSUD NBS characteristics and accuracy were determined. The hypothetical referral numbers in the Dutch population of additional screening markers suggested by CLIR were calculated. In a systematic review, articles reporting NBS leucine concentrations of confirmed patients were included. Our data showed that NBS of 1 963 465 newborns identified 4 MSUD patients and led to 118 false-positive referrals (PPV 3.28%; incidence 1:491 000 newborns). In literature, leucine is the preferred NBS parameter. Total leucine (Xle) concentrations (mass-spectrometry) of 53 detected and 8 false-negative patients (sampling age within 25 hours in 3 patients) reported in literature ranged from 288 to 3376 (median 900) and 42 to 325 (median 209) µmol/L blood respectively. CLIR showed increasing Xle concentrations with sampling age and early NBS sampling and milder variant MSUD phenotypes with (nearly) normal biochemical profiles are causes of false-negative NBS results. We evaluated the effect of additional screening markers and established the Xle/phenylalanine ratio as a promising additional marker ratio for increasing the PPV, while maintaining high sensitivity in the Dutch MSUD NBS.

4.
J Cyst Fibros ; 18(1): 54-63, 2019 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30146269

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Newborn screening for cystic fibrosis (NBSCF) was introduced in the Dutch NBS program in 2011 with a novel strategy. METHODS: Dutch NBSCF consisted of four steps: immuno-reactive trypsin (IRT), Pancreatitis-associated Protein (PAP), DNA analysis by Inno-LiPa (35 mutations), extended gene analysis (EGA) as fourth step and as safety net. Only samples with two CFTR-variants were considered screen-positive, but samples with one disease-causing variant were considered also screen-positive from April 2013. The first 5 years of NBSCF were evaluated during a follow-up ranging from 2 to 6.8 years for sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), ratio of CF/Cystic Fibrosis Screen Positive infants with an Inconclusive Diagnosis (CFSPID) and median age at diagnosis, and were compared to other novel strategies for NBSCF and European Cystic Fibrosis Society (ECFS) Best Practice Standards of Care. RESULTS: NBSCF achieved a sensitivity of 90% (95% CI 82%-94%), specificity of 99.991% (95% CI 99.989%-99.993%), PPV of 63% (95% CI 55%-69%), CF/CFSPID ratio of 4/1, and median age at diagnosis of 22 days, if samples with two variants as well as samples with one disease-causing variant were considered screen-positive. CONCLUSION: The program achieved the goal to minimize the number of false positives and showed a favourable performance but sensitivity and CF/CFSPID ratio did not meet criteria of EFCS Best Standards of Care. Changed cut-off values for PAP and IRT and classification of R117H-7T/9T to non-pathogenic may improve sensitivity to ≥95% and CF/CFSPID ratio to 10/1. PPV is estimated to be around 60%.


Subject(s)
Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator/genetics , Cystic Fibrosis/diagnosis , Genetic Carrier Screening/methods , Guidelines as Topic , Mutation , Neonatal Screening/standards , Registries , Biomarkers/blood , Cystic Fibrosis/blood , Cystic Fibrosis/epidemiology , Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator/analysis , DNA Mutational Analysis , Female , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Male , Netherlands/epidemiology , ROC Curve , Reproducibility of Results
5.
Pract Lab Med ; 4: 41-49, 2016 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28856192

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Lactate is a major parameter in medical decision making. During labor, it is an indicator for fetal acidosis and immediate intervention. In the Emergency Department (ED), rapid analysis of lactate/blood gas is crucial for optimal patient care. Our objectives were to cross-compare-for the first time-two point-of-care testing (POCT) lactate devices with routine laboratory results using novel tight precision targets and evaluate different lactate cut-off concentrations to predict metabolic acidosis. DESIGN AND METHODS: Blood samples from the delivery room (n=66) and from the ED (n=85) were analyzed on two POCT devices, the StatStrip-Lactate (Nova Biomedical) and the iSTAT-1 (CG4+ cassettes, Abbott), and compared to the routine laboratory analyzer (ABL-735, Radiometer). Lactate concentrations were cross-compared between these analyzers. RESULTS: The StatStrip correlated well with the ABL-735 (R=0.9737) and with the iSTAT-1 (R=0.9774) for lactate in umbilical cord blood. Lactate concentrations in ED samples measured on the iSTAT-1 and ABL-735 showed a correlation coefficient of R=0.9953. Analytical imprecision was excellent for lactate and pH, while for pO2 and pCO2 the coefficient of variation was relatively high using the iSTAT-1. CONCLUSION: Both POCT devices showed adequate analytical performance to measure lactate. The StatStrip can indicate metabolic acidosis in 1 µl blood and will be implemented at the delivery room.

6.
PLoS One ; 10(7): e0132018, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26134844

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Vitamin B1 (thiamine-diphosphate) and B6 (pyridoxal-5'phosphate) are micronutrients. Analysis of these micronutrients is important to diagnose potential deficiency which often occurs in elderly people due to malnutrition, in severe alcoholism and in gastrointestinal compromise due to bypass surgery or disease. Existing High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) based methods include the need for derivatization and long analysis time. We developed an Ultra High Performance Liquid Chromatography Tandem Mass spectrometry (UHPLC-MS/MS) assay with internal standards for simultaneous measurement of underivatized thiamine-diphosphate and pyridoxal-5'phosphate without use of ion pairing reagent. METHODS: Whole blood, deproteinized with perchloric acid, containing deuterium labelled internal standards thiamine-diphosphate(thiazole-methyl-D3) and pyridoxal-5'phosphate(methyl-D3), was analyzed by UHPLC-MS/MS. The method was validated for imprecision, linearity, recovery and limit of quantification. Alternate (quantitative) method comparisons of the new versus currently used routine HPLC methods were established with Deming regression. RESULTS: Thiamine-diphosphate and pyridoxal-5'phosphate were measured within 2.5 minutes instrumental run time. Limits of detection were 2.8 nmol/L and 7.8 nmol/L for thiamine-diphosphate and pyridoxal-5'phosphate respectively. Limit of quantification was 9.4 nmol/L for thiamine-diphosphate and 25.9 nmol/L for pyridoxal-5'phosphate. The total imprecision ranged from 3.5-7.7% for thiamine-diphosphate (44-157 nmol/L) and 6.0-10.4% for pyridoxal-5'phosphate (30-130 nmol/L). Extraction recoveries were 101-102% ± 2.5% (thiamine-diphosphate) and 98-100% ± 5% (pyridoxal-5'phosphate). Deming regression yielded slopes of 0.926 and 0.990 in patient samples (n = 282) and national proficiency testing samples (n = 12) respectively, intercepts of +3.5 and +3 for thiamine-diphosphate (n = 282 and n = 12) and slopes of 1.04 and 0.84, intercepts of -2.9 and +20 for pyridoxal-5'phosphate (n = 376 and n = 12). CONCLUSION: The described UHPLC-MS/MS method allows simultaneous determination of underivatized thiamine-diphosphate and pyridoxal-5'phosphate in whole blood without intensive sample preparation.


Subject(s)
Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/methods , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/methods , Thiamine/blood , Vitamin B 6/blood , Blood Specimen Collection , Calibration , Humans , Reference Standards , Sensitivity and Specificity , Time Factors
7.
Am J Cardiol ; 115(11): 1580-6, 2015 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25910524

ABSTRACT

Tako-Tsubo cardiomyopathy (TTC) is characterized by apical ballooning of the left ventricle and symptoms and signs mimicking acute myocardial infarction. The high catecholamine levels in the acute phase of TTC and common emotional triggers suggest a dysregulated stress response system. This study examined whether patients with TTC show exaggerated emotional, neurohormonal, and hemodynamic responses to mental stress. Patients with TTC (n = 18; mean age 68.3 ± 11.7, 78% women) and 2 comparison groups (healthy controls, n = 19; mean age 60.0 ± 7.6, 68% women; chronic heart failure, n = 19; mean age 68.8 ± 10.1, 68% women) performed a structured mental stress task (anger recall and mental arithmetic) and low-grade exercise with repeated assessments of negative emotions, neurohormones (catecholamines: norepinephrine, epinephrine, dopamine, hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis hormones: adrenocorticotropic hormone [ACTH], cortisol), echocardiography, blood pressure, and heart rate. TTC was associated with higher norepinephrine (520.7 ± 125.5 vs 407.9 ± 155.3 pg/ml, p = 0.021) and dopamine (16.2 ± 10.3 vs 10.3 ± 3.9 pg/ml, p = 0.027) levels during mental stress and relatively low emotional arousal (p <0.05) compared with healthy controls. During exercise, norepinephrine (511.3 ± 167.1 vs 394.4 ± 124.3 pg/ml, p = 0.037) and dopamine (17.3 ± 10.0 vs 10.8 ± 4.1 pg/ml, p = 0.017) levels were also significantly higher in patients with TTC compared with healthy controls. In conclusion, catecholamine levels during mental stress and exercise were elevated in TTC compared with healthy controls. No evidence was found for a dysregulated hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis or hemodynamic responses. Patients with TTC showed blunted emotional arousal to mental stress. This study suggests that catecholamine hyper-reactivity and not emotional hyper-reactivity to stress is likely to play a role in myocardial vulnerability in TTC.


Subject(s)
Emotions , Hemodynamics , Neurotransmitter Agents/blood , Stress, Psychological/blood , Stress, Psychological/physiopathology , Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy/blood , Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy/physiopathology , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Stress, Psychological/complications , Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy/complications , Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy/psychology
8.
J Neurol Sci ; 326(1-2): 24-8, 2013 Mar 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23343605

ABSTRACT

Coenzyme Q10 (ubiquinone or CoQ10) serves as a redox carrier in the mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation system. The reduced form of this lipid-soluble antioxidant (ubiquinol) is involved in other metabolic processes as well, such as preventing reactive oxygen species (ROS) induced damage from the mitochondrial membrane. Primary coenzyme Q10 deficiency is a rare, autosomal recessive disorder, often presenting with neurological and/or muscle involvement. Until now, five patients from four families have been described with primary coenzyme Q10 deficiency due to mutations in COQ2 encoding para-hydroxybenzoate polyprenyl transferase. Interestingly, four of these patients showed a distinctive renal involvement (focal segmental glomerular sclerosis, crescentic glomerulonephritis, nephrotic syndrome), which is only very rarely seen in correlation with mitochondrial disorders. The fifth patient deceases due to infantile multi organ failure, also with renal involvement. Here we report a novel homozygous mutation in COQ2 (c.905C>T, p.Ala302Val) in a dizygotic twin from consanguineous Turkish parents. The children were born prematurely and died at the age of five and six months, respectively, after an undulating disease course involving apneas, seizures, feeding problems and generalized edema, alternating with relative stable periods without the need of artificial ventilation. There was no evidence for renal involvement. We would like to raise awareness for this potentially treatable disorder which could be under diagnosed in patients with fatal neonatal or infantile multi-organ disease.


Subject(s)
Alkyl and Aryl Transferases/deficiency , Alkyl and Aryl Transferases/genetics , Diseases in Twins/genetics , Metabolic Diseases/genetics , Multiple Organ Failure/genetics , Mutation/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Diseases in Twins/diagnosis , Diseases in Twins/enzymology , Fatal Outcome , Female , Homozygote , Humans , Infant , Male , Metabolic Diseases/diagnosis , Metabolic Diseases/enzymology , Molecular Sequence Data , Multiple Organ Failure/diagnosis , Multiple Organ Failure/enzymology
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