Biochemical screening tests. Effect of panel size on medical care

1972 ◽  
Vol 129 (1) ◽  
pp. 91-97 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. D. Friedman
1984 ◽  
Vol 87 (3) ◽  
pp. 628-633 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark L. Bassett ◽  
June W. Halliday ◽  
Robyn A. Ferris ◽  
Lawrie W. Powell

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1970 ◽  
Vol 45 (4) ◽  
pp. 702-712
Author(s):  
Robert J. Haggerty

I have in this discussion advanced the notion that we should combine our humanitarian principles with our critical research questions and carry out the bold medical care experiment characteristic of Head Start's educational goals. We should ensure that children receive a basic comprehensive medical care program and then combine it with controlled experiments to answer some of the high priority questions about which we have so little data, such as manpower innovations, medical needs, screening tests, attitudes, utilization, prevalence data, and costs. The solution, as in so much of life, is not a rigid adherence to a limited, parsimonious program or a totally uncritical and wasteful approach, but a middle ground. The middle is always hard to find and even more difficult to maintain. A comprehensive care program with certain guidelines, requirements of quality, and restrictions on unnecessary procedures is my middle ground with simultaneous stimulation through incentives to carry out specific research projects on top of this.


2020 ◽  
pp. jmedgenet-2020-107311
Author(s):  
Diana Carli ◽  
Chiara Bertola ◽  
Simona Cardaropoli ◽  
Valentina Pia Ciuffreda ◽  
Marta Pieretto ◽  
...  

BackgroundMost cases of Beckwith-Wiedemann spectrum (BWSp) are diagnosed after birth and few studies evaluated the prenatal phenotype; here, we investigate these aspects in a large series of patients with BWSp.MethodsEighty-nine patients with BWSp recruited through the BWSp Internal Registry of the Pediatric Genetics Unit of the Regina Margherita Children’s Hospital of Torino and through the Italian Association of Patients with BWSp. Data collection was conducted through administration of a personalised questionnaire, interview to patients’ parents, review of the clinical records, including prenatal ultrasound (US) and biochemical screening tests, physical examination and review of clinical and molecular data of the patients.ResultsSeventeen patients (19.1%) were conceived through assisted reproductive techniques (ART). Twinning occurred in nine pregnancies (three from ART). Pregnancy biochemical screening tests showed increased alpha-fetoprotein (1.52±0.79 multiples of median (MoM), p=0.001), uEstriol (1.37±0.38 MoM, p<0.001) and total human chorionic gonadotrophin (2.14±2.12 MoM, p=0.008) at 15–18 weeks (n=28). Morphology US scan revealed abdominal and head circumferences higher than normal (1.42±1.10 SD scores, p<0.001 and 0.54±0.88, p<0.001, respectively) with normal femur lengths. Sixty-four cases (71.9%%) had a various combination of US findings, including macrosomia (n=32), omphalocele (n=15), enlargement of abdominal organs (n=6), macroglossia (n=11), adrenal cysts/masses (n=2), nephroureteral anomalies (n=11), polyhydramnios (n=28), placental enlargement (n=2) or mesenchymal dysplasia (n=4).ConclusionWe propose a clinical scoring system for prenatal molecular investigations defining major, minor and supportive criteria among the several features often observed prenatally in BWSp.


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