IJNS, Vol. 8, Pages 66: A Retrospective Evaluation of the Predictive Value of Newborn Screening for Vitamin B12 Deficiency in Symptomatic Infants Below 1 Year of Age

Our study showed that NBS markers failed to identify ≥90% infants diagnosed with symptomatic B12 deficiency after the newborn period. Restricting B12 deficiency to clinical cases with B12 2O could interfere with the interpretation of second-tier NBS tHcy. It is generally agreed that tHcy is the best functional test for B12 deficiency in this age group, but the specificity is suboptimal as several of the published NBS algorithms contain a second DBS to show the persistence of elevated tHcy before the infant is recalled for confirmatory testing [5,6,20]. We propose N2O given as birth analgesia is one of the confounding factors that transiently increases tHcy. tHcy returns to the outset when the methionine synthase enzyme activity has been restituted by re-synthesis. This process requires B12, rendering mothers and fetuses with low B12 stores prone to B12 deficiency [1,15]. Our results confirmed the reservation made by Gramer et al. [5] that B12 deficiency presenting after the neonatal period is poorly detectable at NBS. Thus, our study adds to the discussion of the relevance and feasibility of including B12 deficiency as a primary target in NBS [21].When authors of published NBS programs have reported high sensitivities and specificities for infant B12 deficiency [5,6], a biochemical definition of B12 deficiency on blood tests drawn at recall at median 4.5 weeks of age have been applied [6] and all cases have been reported to be symptom free [5,6]. Symptomatic infant B12 deficiency has been shown to manifest later than the first month of life [1,22,23,24] probably because most infants have sufficient B12 stores to remain asymptomatic the first month(s) of life. Further, there is a large discrepancy between the prevalence reported from NBS programs compared to the clinical settings: The birth prevalence of B12 deficiency reported from NBS programs are in the magnitude 0.01–0.09% [6,25]. In the southeastern part of Norway, a retrospective study found that 0.36% of infants under 1 year were diagnosed with B12 deficiency [1], while a Swedish retrospective study estimated an incidence of 0.31% [23]. Moreover, 10% of presumably healthy infants had mild symptoms and biochemical findings suggestive of B12 deficiency in a prospective study [16]. About two thirds of mainly breastfed infants below the age of six months have a biochemical profile indicative of vitamin B12 deficiency, which responds to B12 supplementation [26]. Intervention studies have shown that B12 supplementation to moderately B12 deficiency infants may improve both motor function and regurgitations, which suggests that an adequate B12 status is important for a rapidly developing nervous system [3]. There seems to be a ten times increase in infant B12 deficiency incidence depending on the diagnostic viewpoint: NBS, selective testing, or clinical screening. Theoretically then, our finding of a rather low, ≤10% sensitivity for NBS to identify symptomatic B12 deficiency was expected. Other risk factors beyond maternal B12 deficiency may come into play for infants with B12 deficiency during the first year of life. In the present study, we found associations between symptomatic B12 deficiency in infants with B12 27]. Thus, the risk identified with NBS is propagated through exclusive breastfeeding. We have previously shown that formula feeding was protective of infant B12 deficiency [1,15,16], so if the infant is formula fed, this chain of risks is broken, and the predictability of NBS for infant B12 deficiency is lost. This is unique for B12 deficiency NBS. In no other disease screened for is the source feeding the only factor decisive for symptom presentation. Another factor may be maternal use of N2O during labor, a common form of pain relief. We found that N2O was provided as an analgesia option at 74% of the hospitals from where the un-matched controls were collected, in a distribution representative for Norway. We have previously shown that N2O was used by 64–68% of women in labor [1]. In the present study, we showed that tHcy was higher in newborns at hospitals where N2O was optionable as birth analgesia compared to where N2O was unavailable. Previously, we found the maternal dose of N2O to be a significant predictor for tHcy (but not MMA) at NBS. However, at diagnosis of symptomatic infant B12 deficiency, maternal dose of N2O was associated with both tHcy and MMA. We therefore suggested that N2O is a risk factor for later presenting symptomatic infant B12 deficiency [1,15,16].

Presenting symptoms in three of the five NBS positive infants were spells of apneas, absences, or seizures, and two of five showed abnormal eye contact. These are potentially life-threatening symptoms that could have been prevented with NBS for B12 deficiency. Half of the cases with B12 < 160 or holoTC < 35 pmol/L had head lag at pull-to-sit and a third had tremor, which were significant findings compared to clinical controls. The yield of NBS was doubled in this subgroup with a stricter B12 definition, although the sensitivity remained ≤10%. We speculate in a difference in sensitivity of having symptoms from low B12 between different genotypes of the B12 dependent enzymes, and then there is a risk that the more sensitive and vulnerable infants will be missed in NBS.

Our study was original in the design of combining clinical cases with symptomatic B12 deficiency with their respective NBS results and re-analysis of DBS. In the unmatched 450 DBS controls, we only had access to whether N2O was available at the hospital of birth or not; however, data on the individual mothers receiving N2O or not was not retrieved for this cohort. This information would probably have strengthened the association between mothers N2O intake and tHcy in DBS as we have shown in a recent study [15]. Maternal B12 parameters were neither available during pregnancy nor at birth, representing a limitation to our study. Additionally, as we previously showed, tHcy increases with storage time of DBS [15], and this introduced a bias to our cohort. This may, theoretically, have overestimated some of the few oldest cases picked up by the Austrian algorithm second-tier tHcy test [6], but it would not change the conclusion of our study.

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