Publications by authors named "Gwendolyn Gramer"

Newborn screening (NBS) is one of the most effective measures of secondary prevention. While the benefit of NBS on the clinical long-term outcomes of children with inherited metabolic diseases (IMD) has been demonstrated, the potential burden of families living with an early diagnosed and treated child with an IMD has not been thoroughly investigated. The aim of this longitudinal questionnaire-based study on 369 families living with a child with an IMD was to investigate the psychosocial and financial burden following a true-positive NBS.

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The current German newborn screening (NBS) panel includes 13 inherited metabolic diseases (IMDs). In addition, a NBS pilot study in Southwest Germany identifies individuals with propionic acidemia (PA), methylmalonic acidemia (MMA), combined and isolated remethylation disorders (e.g.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Over 53 months at a German NBS center, 516,803 newborns were screened, identifying two confirmed HT1 cases and one genetically confirmed case of MAAI deficiency from a suspected two, with 42 children showing elevated succinylacetone levels.
  • * The study includes a unique 32-year observation of a case with MAAI deficiency, demonstrating a typically benign clinical course and underscoring
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Newborn screening (NBS) for cystic fibrosis (CF) based on pancreatitis-associated protein (PAP) has been performed for several years. While some influencing factors are known, there is currently a lack of information on the influence of seasonal temperature on PAP determination or on the course of PAP blood concentration in infants during the first year of life. Using data from two PAP studies at the Heidelberg NBS centre and storage experiments, we compared PAP determinations in summer and winter and determined the direct influence of temperature.

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Analytical and therapeutic innovations led to a continuous but variable extension of newborn screening (NBS) programmes worldwide. Every extension requires a careful evaluation of feasibility, diagnostic (process) quality and possible health benefits to balance benefits and limitations. The aim of this study was to evaluate the suitability of 18 candidate diseases for inclusion in NBS programmes.

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Newborn screening (NBS) programs are effective measures of secondary prevention and have been successively extended. We aimed to evaluate NBS for methylmalonic acidurias, propionic acidemia, homocystinuria, remethylation disorders and neonatal vitamin B deficiency, and report on the identification of cofactor-responsive disease variants. This evaluation of the previously established combined multiple-tier NBS algorithm is part of the prospective pilot study "NGS2025" from August 2016 to September 2022.

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Newborn screening (NBS) for isovaleric acidemia (IVA) is performed by flow injection tandem mass spectrometry quantifying C5 carnitines (C5). Isovalerylcarnitine, however, is isomeric with pivaloylcarnitine which can be present in blood due to maternal use of pivaloylester-containing antibiotics, available in Germany since late 2016. During a 36-month period (January 19-December 21), all newborns screened in Hamburg with a C5 above cutoff (NeoGram®: 0.

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Purpose: Cystic fibrosis (CF) was added to the German newborn bloodspot screening (NBS) panel in 2016. This study assesses parental perceptions of CF-NBS and confirmatory testing.

Methods: Prospective questionnaire-based survey administered to parents of children with positive CF-NBS over 40 months after initiation of CF-NBS in Southwest Germany.

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Objectives: Determination of methylmalonic acid (MMA) from dried blood spots (DBS) is commonly performed in clinical diagnostics and newborn screening for propionic acidemia (PA) and methylmalonic acidemia. Isobaric compounds of MMA having the same mass can affect diagnostic reliability and quantitative results, which represents a previously unrecognized pitfall in clinical assays for MMA. We set out to identify interfering substances of MMA in DBS, serum and urine samples from confirmed patients with PA and methylmalonic acidemia.

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Vitamin B deficiency, mostly of maternal origin in newborns, is a well-treatable condition but can cause severe neurologic sequelae in infants. Early detection of vitamin B deficiency allows the pre-symptomatic treatment of affected children. This evaluation assesses the characteristics of maternal vitamin B deficiency detected by newborn screening.

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Newborn screening (NBS) for inherited metabolic diseases (IMDs) substantially shortens a patient's journey. It enables the early start of metabolic treatment which might prevent potentially lethal neonatal disease manifestations, while promoting favorable development and long-term clinical outcomes. This study aims to assess growth in screened individuals with IMDs under different dietary regimes.

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Newborn screening (NBS) is a public health measure to identify children with treatable disorders within the first days of life allowing presymptomatic treatment. It is the most successful measure of secondary medical prevention and part of public health programs in many countries worldwide. Application of second-tier strategies in NBS allows for increased specificity and consecutively a higher positive predictive value.

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Background: Previous studies suggest that PAP-based CF protocols are suitable for newborn screening (NBS) for cystic fibrosis (CF) when newborns designated as CFSPID should not be detected. However, there are still discussions about the performance of IRT/PAP algorithms. We present the final results of a pilot study evaluating a IRT/PAP protocol with an IRT-dependent safety net (SN) conducted from 2008 to 2016 in southwestern Germany on nearly 500,000 newborns.

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Background: During the initial 26-week SPARK (Safety Paediatric efficAcy phaRmacokinetic with Kuvan®) study, addition of sapropterin dihydrochloride (Kuvan®; a synthetic formulation of the natural cofactor for phenylalanine hydroxylase, tetrahydrobiopterin; BH), to a phenylalanine (Phe)-restricted diet, led to a significant improvement in Phe tolerance versus a Phe-restricted diet alone in patients aged 0-4 years with BH-responsive phenylketonuria (PKU) or mild hyperphenylalaninaemia (HPA). Based on these results, the approved indication for sapropterin in Europe was expanded to include patients < 4 years of age. Herein, we present results of the SPARK extension study (NCT01376908), evaluating the long-term safety, dietary Phe tolerance, blood Phe concentrations and neurodevelopmental outcomes in patients < 4 years of age at randomisation, over an additional 36 months of treatment with sapropterin.

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Background: In infancy multiple acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (MADD) is commonly a severe inherited metabolic disease caused by genetic defects in electron transfer flavoprotein (ETF) or ETF ubiquinone oxidoreductase. Both enzymes require flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) as a cofactor. Riboflavin (vitamin B) is a precursor in the synthesis of FAD.

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Objective: To evaluate the clinical outcomes at age 1.5 ± 0.5 years of infants with vitamin B deficiency identified by newborn screening (NBS).

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Objective: To expand the genetic spectrum of hereditary spastic paraparesis by a treatable condition and to evaluate the therapeutic effects of biotin supplementation in an adult patient with biotinidase deficiency (BD).

Methods: We performed exome sequencing (ES) in a patient with the clinical diagnosis of complex hereditary spastic paraparesis. The patient was examined neurologically, including functional rating scales.

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Vitamin B deficiency, mostly of maternal origin in newborns, is a well treatable condition but can cause severe neurologic sequelae. In women of childbearing age and pregnant women worldwide vitamin B deficiency has been reported with frequencies of 10%-50%. Children with vitamin B deficiency are asymptomatic at birth but may develop severe multisystemic symptoms, including irreversible developmental impairment in the second half-year of life.

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Newborn screening for cystic fibrosis (CF-NBS) was introduced in Germany in 2016. Currently, systematic follow-up of positive CF-NBS results is not implemented or reimbursed in the NBS program. We investigated results of confirmatory testing over 24 months after implementation of CF-NBS for a large German NBS center before and after introduction of an active tracking system and performed a cost calculation for tracking.

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Objective: To evaluate the relationship between circulating phenylalanine and brain function as well as neuropsychiatric symptoms in adults with phenylketonuria.

Methods: In this prospective cross-sectional study, early-treated patients with phenylketonuria older than 30 years and age- and sex-matched controls were included. Extensive neurologic evaluation, neuropsychological and behavioral testing, sensory and motor evoked potentials, and MRI were performed.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study examined the long-term clinical outcomes of 306 individuals with inherited metabolic diseases (IMDs) identified by extended newborn screening (NBS) from 1999 to 2016, tracking them for an average of 6.2 years.
  • - While NBS could not prevent metabolic decompensation in all cases, the majority (75.9%) did not experience permanent disease signs, with most showing normal development and cognitive outcomes.
  • - The findings suggest that NBS for IMDs serves as an effective secondary prevention program, with high-quality NBS processes being critical for achieving these positive outcomes.
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Background: Primary carnitine deficiency due to mutations in the SLC22A5 gene is a rare but well-treatable metabolic disorder that puts patients at risk for metabolic decompensations, skeletal and cardiac myopathy and sudden cardiac death.

Results: We report on a 7-year-old boy diagnosed with primary carnitine deficiency 2 years after successful heart transplantation thanks his younger sister's having been identified via expanded newborn screening during a pilot study evaluating an extension of the German newborn screening panel.

Conclusion: As L-carnitine supplementation can prevent and mostly reverse clinical symptoms of primary carnitine deficiency, all patients with cardiomyopathy should be investigated for primary carnitine deficiency even if newborn screening results were unremarkable.

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Background: Phenylketonuria (PKU; OMIM#261600) is a rare metabolic disorder caused by mutations in the phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) gene resulting in high phenylalanine (Phe) in blood and brain. If not treated early this results in intellectual disability, behavioral and psychiatric problems, microcephaly, motor deficits, eczematous rash, autism, seizures, and developmental problems. There is a controversial discussion of whether patients with PKU have an additional risk for atherosclerosis due to interference of Phe with cholesterol synthesis and LDL-cholesterol regulation.

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Aromatic l-amino-acid decarboxylase (AADC) deficiency is an inherited disorder of biogenic amine metabolism with a broad neurological phenotype. The clinical symptoms overlap with other diseases resulting in an often delayed diagnosis. Innovative disease-changing treatment options, particularly gene therapy, have emphasised the need for an early diagnosis.

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Objective: To evaluate a systematic newborn screening (NBS) strategy for vitamin B deficiency.

Study Design: In a prospective single-center NBS study, a systematic screening strategy for vitamin B deficiency was developed and evaluated. Tandem-mass spectrometry screening was complemented by 2 second-tier strategies, measuring methylmalonic/3-OH-propionic/methylcitric acid, and homocysteine from dried blood spots.

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