International Journal of Neonatal Screening (Jul 2021)

Newborn Screening for SCID: Experience in Spain (Catalonia)

  • Ana Argudo-Ramírez,
  • Andrea Martín-Nalda,
  • Jose Manuel González de Aledo-Castillo,
  • Rosa López-Galera,
  • Jose Luis Marín-Soria,
  • Sonia Pajares-García,
  • Mónica Martínez-Gallo,
  • Marina García-Prat,
  • Roger Colobran,
  • Jacques G. Riviere,
  • Yania Quintero,
  • Tatiana Collado,
  • Antonia Ribes,
  • Judit García-Villoria,
  • Pere Soler-Palacín

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijns7030046
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 3
p. 46

Abstract

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Newborn screening (NBS) for severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) started in Catalonia in January-2017, being the first Spanish and European region to universally include this testing. In Spain, a pilot study with 5000 samples was carried out in Seville in 2014; also, a research project with about 35,000 newborns will be carried out in 2021–2022 in the NBS laboratory of Eastern Andalusia. At present, the inclusion of SCID is being evaluated in Spain. The results obtained in the first three and a half years of experience in Catalonia are presented here. All babies born between January-2017 and June-2020 were screened through TREC-quantification in DBS with the Enlite Neonatal TREC-kit from PerkinElmer. A total of 222,857 newborns were screened, of which 48 tested positive. During the study period, three patients were diagnosed with SCID: an incidence of 1 in 74,187 newborns; 17 patients had clinically significant T-cell lymphopenia (non-SCID) with an incidence of 1 in 13,109 newborns who also benefited from the NBS program. The results obtained provide further evidence of the benefits of early diagnosis and curative treatment to justify the inclusion of this disease in NBS programs. A national NBS program is needed, also to define the exact SCID incidence in Spain.

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