Tandem Mass Spectrometric Analysis for Amino, Organic, and Fatty Acid Disorders in Newborn Dried Blood Spots

Background: Tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) is rapidly being adopted by newborn screening programs to screen dried blood spots for >20 markers of disease in a single assay. Limited information is available for setting the marker cutoffs and for the resulting positive predictive values. Methods:...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical chemistry (Baltimore, Md.) Md.), 2001-11, Vol.47 (11), p.1945-1955
Hauptverfasser: Zytkovicz, Thomas H, Fitzgerald, Eileen F, Marsden, Deborah, Larson, Cecilia A, Shih, Vivian E, Johnson, Donna M, Strauss, Arnold W, Comeau, Anne Marie, Eaton, Roger B, Grady, George F
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background: Tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) is rapidly being adopted by newborn screening programs to screen dried blood spots for >20 markers of disease in a single assay. Limited information is available for setting the marker cutoffs and for the resulting positive predictive values. Methods: We screened >160 000 newborns by MS/MS. The markers were extracted from blood spots into a methanol solution with deuterium-labeled internal standards and then were derivatized before analysis by MS/MS. Multiple reaction monitoring of each sample for the markers of interest was accomplished in ∼1.9 min. Cutoffs for each marker were set at 6–13 SD above the population mean. Results: We identified 22 babies with amino acid disorders (7 phenylketonuria, 11 hyperphenylalaninemia, 1 maple syrup urine disease, 1 hypermethioninemia, 1 arginosuccinate lyase deficiency, and 1 argininemia) and 20 infants with fatty and organic acid disorders (10 medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiencies, 5 presumptive short-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiencies, 2 propionic acidemias, 1 carnitine palmitoyltransferase II deficiency, 1 methylcrotonyl-CoA carboxylase deficiency, and 1 presumptive very-long chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency). Approximately 0.3% of all newborns screened were flagged for either amino acid or acylcarnitine markers; approximately one-half of all the flagged infants were from the 5% of newborns who required neonatal intensive care or had birth weights
ISSN:0009-9147
1530-8561
DOI:10.1093/clinchem/47.11.1945