ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE: To study school achievement in grade 9 of compulsory school in children with congenital hypothyroidism (CH), both those detected by the national screening program and those with a normal screening result and thus diagnosed later. STUDY DESIGN: Nationwide study of children in the Swedish Medical Birth Register (n = 1â547â927) from 1982 through 1997, linked to the neonatal screening CH cohort and the National School Register. Dried blood spot (DBS) samples are collected from all newborn infants, according to the neonatal screening program. Thyroid-stimulating hormone was used for CH screening. CH was defined as either having an abnormal screening result (DBS+) and treatment with levothyroxine (LT4+) or having a normal screening result but a CH diagnosis in the National Patient Register and treatment with LT4 (DBS-/ICD+/LT4+). Regression models were used to study school performance, which as measured as grade point sum and national test results. Sibling analysis also was performed to account for unmeasured familial factors. RESULTS: There were 448 children who were DBS+/LT4+ and 475 children who were DBS-/ICD+/LT4+. Children with CH had lower grade point sum, adjusted ß = - 6.34 (95% CI -11.7 to -1.01) and adjusted ß = -10.3 (95% CI -15.5 to -5.20) for those with abnormal (DBS+/LT4+) and normal screening (DBS-/ICD+/LT4+) results, respectively. CH also was associated with lower result on the national tests, especially in mathematics. These associations remained in the sibling analyses. CONCLUSIONS: Youth with CH had slightly lower school achievements compared with those without CH and compared with their siblings. CH children with a normal screening result, and thus diagnosed later, presented the lowest results on grade point sum and national tests.
ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the long-term costs and health effects of the Swedish newborn screening program for classic phenylketonuria (PKU) alone and in combination with congenital hypothyroidism compared with no screening. STUDY DESIGN: A decision-analytic model was developed to estimate and compare the long-term (80 years) costs and health effects of newborn screening for PKU and congenital hypothyroidism. Data were obtained from the literature and translated to Swedish conditions. A societal perspective was taken, including costs falling on health care providers, municipal care and services, as well as production loss due to morbidity. RESULTS: Screening 100â000 newborns for PKU resulted in 73 gained quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) compared with no screening. When adding congenital hypothyroidism, the number of gained QALYs was 232 compared with PKU alone, adding up to a total of 305 QALYs gained. Corresponding cost estimates were $80.8, $70.3, and $10.05 million USD for no screening, PKU screening, and PKU plus congenital hypothyroidism screening, respectively, indicating that screening for PKU plus congenital hypothyroidism was more effective and less costly compared with the other strategies. The majority of cost savings with PKU plus congenital hypothyroidism screening was due to reductions in productivity losses and municipal care and services costs. CONCLUSION: The Swedish newborn screening program for PKU and congenital hypothyroidism saves substantial costs for society while generating additional QALYs, emphasizing the importance of public investments in early diagnosis and treatment.