| Literature DB >> 31866572 |
Stacey Lee1, Jennifer L Taylor2, Charles Redmond3, Andrew G Hadd3, Jon A Kemppainen3, Brian C Haynes3, Scott Shone1, Donald B Bailey4, Gary J Latham3.
Abstract
Newborn screening is designed for presymptomatic identification of serious conditions with effective early interventions. Clinical laboratories must perform prospective pilot studies to ensure that the analytical performance and workflow for a given screening test are appropriate. We assessed the potential to screen newborns for fragile X syndrome, a monogenic neurodevelopmental disorder, by establishing a customized, high-throughput PCR and analysis software system designed to detect fragile X mental retardation 1 gene repeat expansions from dried blood spots (DBSs). Assay precision, accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity were characterized across the categorical range of repeat expansions. The assay consistently resolved genotypes within three CGG repeats of reference values up to at least 137 repeats and within six repeats for larger expansions up to 200 repeats. Accuracy testing results were concordant with reference results. Full and premutation alleles were detected from subnanogram DNA inputs eluted from DBSs and from mixtures with down to 1% relative abundance of the respective expansion. Analysis of 963 deidentified newborn DBS samples identified 957 normal and 6 premutation specimens, consistent with previously published prevalence estimates. These studies demonstrate that the assay system can support high-throughput newborn screening programs.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31866572 PMCID: PMC7103763 DOI: 10.1016/j.jmoldx.2019.11.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Diagn ISSN: 1525-1578 Impact factor: 5.568