| Literature DB >> 33126922 |
Britta Runkel1, Birgit Klüppelholz1, Anne Rummer1, Wiebke Sieben1, Ulrike Lampert1, Claudia Bollig2,3, Martina Markes1, Ulrike Paschen1, Konstanze Angelescu4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sickle cell disease (SCD) is an inherited autosomal recessive disorder caused by the replacement of normal haemoglobin (HbA) by mutant Hb (sickle Hb, HbS). The sickle-shaped red blood cells lead to haemolysis and vaso-occlusion. Especially in the first years of life, patients with SCD are at high risk of life-threatening complications. SCD prevalence shows large regional variations; the disease predominantly occurs in sub-Saharan Africa. We aimed to systematically assess the evidence on the benefit of newborn screening for SCD followed by an earlier treatment start.Entities:
Keywords: Anaemia—sickle cell; Newborn screening; SCD screening; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33126922 PMCID: PMC7602310 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-020-01504-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Certainty of conclusions regularly inferred for different evidence situations if studies with the same qualitative certainty of results are available according to IQWiG methods
| Number of studies | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 (with statistically significant effect) | ≥ 2 | |||||
| Homogenous | Heterogeneous | |||||
| Meta-analysis statistically significant | Effects in the same directiona | |||||
| Clear | Moderate | No | ||||
| High | Indication | Proof | Proof | Indication | - | |
| Moderate | Hint | Indication | Indication | Hint | - | |
| Low | - | Hint | Hint | - | - | |
aEffects in the same direction are present if a clear or moderate direction is recognizable despite of heterogeneity
Fig. 1Flowchart of study selection for direct evidence
Study characteristics
| Study | Study design | Investigated newborns (intervention/control) | Number of newborns with SCD | Place and period of recruitment | Intervention/control | Main inclusion criteria | Patient-relevant endpoints | Funding source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| King et al. [ | Retrospective controlled cohort study | 150,803 | 435a (SCD-S/S) | Jamaica Victoria Jubilee Hospital, Kingston, 11/1995–07/2006 University Hospital of the West Indies, Kingston, 10/1997–07/2006 Spanish Town Hospital, St. Catherine, 04/1998–07/2006 | - Screening of live newborns for SCD - In the case of diagnosis of an SCD initial consultation and education programme - If possible, parents will receive a newborn first consultation at the clinic before the 4th month of life - Guidance of the parents on how to perform a splenic palpation - From the 4th month of life penicillin prophylaxis - Every 3 months routine examination in clinic, every 6 months after 5 years of age | - Consecutive live newborns - Screening of umbilical cord blood indicates SCD-S/S phenotype - Confirmation diagnostics confirmed SCD-S/S (electrophoresis) | Mortality in 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 5th, and 10th year of lifeb | Not stated |
approx. 30,000 | 105 (SCD-S/S) | Jamaica Victoria Jubilee Hospital, Kingston, 06/1973–12/1975 | -Screening of all live newborns for SCD -Follow-up every 3 months |
SCD-S/S homozygous sickle cell disease
aParents of 40 of the 435 newborns did not attend the initial consultation. Therefore, 395 newborns were included in the intervention programme
bOther reported patient-relevant endpoints (hospitalisations, “serious illness”, and invasive pneumococcal disease) were not considered, as their operationalisations were unusable
cFirst subpopulation of the birth cohort 06/1973–12/1981 (N = 100,000) of Victoria Jubilee Hospital, Kingston, Jamaica. The second (recruitment: 12/1975–01/1979) and third subpopulations (recruitment: 01/1979–12/1981) are not presented in the report because in these subpopulations the diagnosis of SCD was associated with secondary preventive measures; see Lee 1995 [25]
Risk of bias in the study included (King et al. [26])
| Study | Both treatment groups studied in parallel (yes/no) | Comparability of groups or adequate control for confounding factors | Blinding patient/investigator | Selective reporting improbable | Absence of other factors potentially causing bias | Risk of bias (study level) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| King et al. [ | No | Uncleara | No/no | Yes | Yes | High |
aNo control for potential confounding factors. No baseline data available. Comparability of groups in terms of baseline characteristics seems likely, as newborns of the same region were included in both groups
Results on mortality
| Study | Age | Intervention | Control | Intervention vs. control | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mortality rate | Mortality rate | OR | [95% CI] | |||||
| King et al. [ | 395c | 105 | ||||||
| 1st year of life | n.a. | 0.01 [0.01; 0.03] | n.a. | 0.10 [0.04; 0.15] | 0.09 | [0.03; 0.30] | < 0.001 | |
| 2nd year of life | n.a. | 0.01 [0.01; 0.03] | n.a. | 0.14 [0.07; 0.20] | 0.06 | [0.02; 0.20] | < 0.001 | |
| 3rd year of life | n.a. | 0.01 [0.01; 0.03] | n.a. | 0.17 [0.10; 0.25] | 0.05 | [0.02; 0.15] | < 0.001 | |
| 5th year of life | n.a. | 0.02 [0.01; 0.04] | n.a. | 0.19 [0.12; 0.27] | 0.09 | [0.04; 0.22] | < 0.001 | |
| 10th year of life | n.a. | 0.09 [0.02; 0.27] | n.a. | 0.23 [0.15; 0.32] | 0.33 | [0.07; 1.64] | 0.176 | |
CI confidence interval, n number of participants evaluated, n.a. not available, OR odds ratio
aIQWiG’s own calculation of the mortality rate from data on survival probability which is given in King et al. [26]. Information on the method used to estimate survival probability was missing in King et al. [26]. No absolute numbers of deaths or survivals available
bIQWiG´s own calculation: approximately determined from the data on mortality rates in the groups and self-estimated number n
cParents of 40 of the 435 newborns did not attend the initial consultation. Therefore, 395 newborns were included in the intervention programme