| Literature DB >> 33073007 |
Hao Tang1, Lisa Feuchtbaum1, Stanley Sciortino1, Jamie Matteson1, Deepika Mathur1, Tracey Bishop1, Richard S Olney1.
Abstract
The California Department of Public Health started universal newborn screening for Pompe disease in August 2018 with a two-tier process including: (1) acid alpha-glucosidase (GAA) enzyme activity assay followed by, (2) GAA gene sequencing analysis. This study examines results from the first year of screening in a large and diverse screening population. With 453,152 screened newborns, the birth prevalence and GAA enzyme activity associated with various types of Pompe disease classifications are described. The frequency of GAA gene mutations and allele variants are reported. Of 88 screen positives, 18 newborns were resolved as Pompe disease, including 2 classic infantile-onset and 16 suspected late-onset form. The c.-32-13T>G variant was the most common pathogenic mutation reported. African American and Asian/Pacific Islander newborns had higher allele frequencies for both pathogenic and pseudodeficiency variants. After the first year of Pompe disease screening in California, the disease distribution in the population is now better understood. With the ongoing long-term follow-up system currently in place, our understanding of the complex genotype-phenotype relationships will become more evident in the future, and this should help us better understand the clinical significance of identified cases.Entities:
Keywords: California; Pompe disease; newborn screening
Year: 2020 PMID: 33073007 PMCID: PMC7422988 DOI: 10.3390/ijns6010009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Neonatal Screen ISSN: 2409-515X
Figure 1California Pompe disease newborn screening algorithm.
California newborn screening Pompe disease diagnosis guideline.
| Diagnosis | Mutation Status | Symptoms | Long-Term Follow-Up |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pompe–classic infant onset (with cardiac involvement) * | Pathogenic/likely pathogenic/VUS alleles ** ≥ 2 | Yes, with positive cardiac involvement | Yes |
| Pompe–non-classic infant onset (without cardiac involvement) * | Pathogenic/likely pathogenic/VUS alleles ** ≥ 2 | Yes, without positive cardiac involvement | Yes |
| Pompe–late onset Pompe disease * | Pathogenic/likely pathogenic/VUS alleles ** ≥ 2 | No | Yes |
| Pompe–not otherwise specified * | Pathogenic/likely pathogenic/VUS alleles ** ≥ 2 | No | Yes |
| Pompe–carrier | Pathogenic/likely pathogenic/VUS alleles = 1 | No | No |
| Pompe–pseudodeficiency | Pseudodeficiency alleles | No | No |
| No disorder | No mutation found | No | No |
* Regardless of the presence of pseudodeficiency allele, ** Any combination of pathogenic-pathogenic, pathogenic-likely pathogenic, pathogenic-VUS, likely pathogenic-VUS, and VUS-VUS.
California Pompe disease screening results (among screen positives) by neonatal factors.
| Classic Infantile-Onset | Suspected Late-Onset | Carrier | Pseudo-Deficiency | No Disorder | Overall | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| Female | 1 | 5 | 14 | 11 | 6 | 37 |
| Male | 1 | 11 | 20 | 9 | 10 | 51 |
|
| ||||||
| NICU | 2 | 1 | 4 | 11 | 14 | 32 |
| Non-NICU | 0 | 15 | 30 | 9 | 2 | 56 |
|
| ||||||
| Premature | 1 | 2 | 4 | 8 | 2 | 17 |
| Full term | 1 | 14 | 30 | 12 | 14 | 71 |
|
| 2 | 16 | 34 | 20 | 16 | 88 |
|
| 5/1,000,000 | 36/1,000,000 | 75/1,000,000 | 45/1,000,000 | ||
| (1 in 226,600) | (1 in 28,300) | (1 in 13,300) | (1 in 22,700) |
Figure 2Acid alpha-glucosidase (GAA) activities (% of daily means) by resolution for positive Pompe disease screening.
Pompe disease variants identified by California newborn screening.
| Mutation Name | Count |
|---|---|
| Pathogenic variant | |
| c.-32-13T>G | 18 |
| c.[752C>T;761C>T] * | 8 |
| c.2238G>C, c.1099T>C, c.1799G>A, c.1437+1G>A, c.1548G>A, c.1579delA, c.1754+1_1754+12delinsCCA, c.1856G>A, c.1933G>A, c.1935C>A, c.1979G>A, c.2297A>C *, c.2408_2426del19, c.2560C>T, c.2646+2T>A, c.29delA, c.511del, c.546G>A, c.546G>C, c.573C>A, c.670C>T, c.925G>A | <5 |
| Subtotal | 52 |
| Pseudodeficiency allele | |
| c.[1726G>A;2065G>A] | 42 |
| c.2065G>A | 5 |
| c.271G>A | 5 |
| Subtotal | 52 |
| Variant of uncertain significance | |
| c.1048G>A, c.1019A>G, c.1357G>A, c.1375G>A, c.1392_1393delinsTT, c.1477C>T, c.1757C>T, c.2221G>A, c.2261C>T, c.265C>T, c.266G>A **, c.316C>T, c.546+5G>T, c.726G>A, c.868A>G | <3 |
| Subtotal | 16 |
| Total | 120 |
* Noted as presumably non-pathogenic in the updated Pompe variant database: http://pompevariantdatabase.nl. ** Noted as presumably non-pathogenic but pathogenic with a null allele in the updated Pompe variant database: http://pompevariantdatabase.nl.
Allelic frequency by race/ethnicity.
| Pathogenic | Pseudodeficiency Allele | Uncertain Significance | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Race/Ethnicity | Count | Allele Frequency | Count | Allele Frequency | Count | Allele Frequency |
| African American ( | 6 | 161/1,000,000 | 4 | 107/1,000,000 | 3 | 80/1,000,000 |
| Asian/Pacific Islander (API, | 15 | 216/1,000,000 | 30 | 432/1,000,000 | 6 | 86/1,000,000 |
| Hispanic ( | 14 | 66/1,000,000 | 7 | 33/1,000,000 | 5 | 23/1,000,000 |
| White ( | 17 | 148/1,000,000 | 11 | 95/1,000,000 | 2 | 17/1,000,000 |
Mutation status of diagnosed cases identified by California newborn screening.
| Diagnosis | Number of Cases | Mutation Status |
|---|---|---|
| Pompe—classic infantile onset | 1 | Pathogenic, homozygous |
| 1 | Pathogenic & pathogenic | |
| Pompe—suspected late onset | 3 | Pathogenic, homozygous |
| 7 | Pathogenic & Pathogenic/likely pathogenic | |
| 4 | Pathogenic & VUS | |
| 1 | VUS, homozygous | |
| 1 | VUS & VUS |