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October 8 , 2000

New Test Detects Potentially Fatal Disease in Newborns


PHILADELPHIA (Reuters Health) - A new test reliably detects a disease in newborns that can be fatal, often within the first year of life, according to findings from a statewide screening program instituted in North Carolina.

The disease, called MCADD--for medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency--causes 2% to 4% of cases of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). What's more, it appears to be more common than phenylketonuria (PKU), the dangerous condition every US newborn is routinely screened for, according to Drs. Shawn E. McCandless and Joseph Meunzer of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The findings were presented here at the annual meeting of the American Society of Human Genetics.

MCADD is an inborn error of metabolism that prevents the proper digestion of body fat stores. Whenever healthy people go without eating for too long, their bodies naturally draw upon stored fat as fuel. But people with MCADD are unable to digest their stored body fat, and must fuel their bodies with recently consumed sugars and starches.

If left undetected, MCADD will cause death in up to one third of affected children, with another third experiencing coma or seizures that can lead to permanent disability, McCandless said. Yet the treatment is simple: parents are told to make sure their child eats regularly. They are also warned to avoid obesity in their children because dieting is difficult.

In screening 327,031 newborns in North Carolina over the past 3 years, 24 were found to have MCADD. These babies were otherwise completely normal at birth, and all are doing well now, the researchers reported.

This means the screening effort detected about one MCADD baby per 10,000 white infants tested. Although MCADD is thought to be a disease of white children, the researchers discovered one case in an African-American baby. By contrast, PKU occurs in about one of 20,000 births, McCandless said.

When North Carolina began screening for MCADD 3 years ago, it was the first state to do so, but a handful of states now offer the screening, Meunzer added.

As with other screening tests for newborns, only a tiny drop of blood is required. The sample is evaluated using tandem mass spectrometry, a technology for rapid, highly sophisticated chemical analysis. Meunzer explained that this instrument makes widespread screening for MCADD practical.

 

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