Newborn screening for phenylketonuria: predictive validity as a function of age
McCabe, E.R.; McCabe, L.; Mosher, G.A.; Allen, R.J.; Berman, J.L.
Pediatrics 72(3): 390-398
1983
ISSN/ISBN: 0031-4005 PMID: 6889041 Document Number: 216879
Data from questionnaires were assembled for 109 infants with phenylketonuria (PKU) and 114 control infants to assess the predictive validity of newborn screening for PKU as a function of age. Patients with PKU had values of less than 4 mg/dL in cord blood and in samples from days 1, 2, and 4 through 7. The proportion of patients with PKU expected to fall below screening cutoffs of 2, 4, and 6 mg/dL was predicted for each age range. Using a cutoff of 4 mg/dL, approximately one third of patients with PKU would be missed by a sample taken from the neonate in the first 12 hours of life, and nearly 10% would be missed with a sample from the second 12 hours of life. This study shows that not all patients with PKU will be detected by newborn screening, and that the phenomenon of early nursery discharges must be considered in developing appropriate screening strategies.