NBS Fundamentals - Tiny Patient Protectors
- Primary Goal: Identify infants with specific congenital, genetic, or metabolic disorders before symptom onset.
- Optimal Timing: Blood sample collection between 24-72 hours after birth, or prior to hospital discharge.
- Procedure: Heel-prick capillary blood spotted onto a special filter paper (Guthrie card).
- Impact: Facilitates prompt intervention, mitigating severe health consequences like intellectual disability or death.

⭐ NBS is a crucial public health strategy; conditions screened are typically serious but treatable if caught early.
Screening Criteria & Indian Scene - Who, What, Why India
- Goal: Early detection & intervention to prevent severe outcomes (morbidity, mortality, disability).
- Wilson & Jungner Criteria (Modified): Basis for selecting disorders.
- Condition: Significant health problem, recognizable early/latent stage, understood natural history.
- Test: Suitable, acceptable, validated.
- Treatment: Available, effective.
- Program: Cost-effective, continuous, agreed policy on who to treat.
- Indian Scenario:
- NBS largely opportunistic; not yet universal.
- Commonly screened: Congenital Hypothyroidism (CH), G6PD deficiency, Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia (CAH).
- Challenges: Cost, infrastructure, public awareness, follow-up.
- ICMR guidelines exist; Rashtriya Bal Swasthya Karyakram (RBSK) includes some screening.
⭐ Congenital Hypothyroidism is the most common preventable cause of intellectual disability effectively targeted by NBS programs.
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Testing Toolkit - Dots & Detectives
- Sample: Dried Blood Spots (DBS) on Guthrie card (heel prick).
- Timing: 24-72 hours post-feed.
- Detection Methods:
- Tandem Mass Spectrometry (MS/MS): Multiplex analysis from one DBS.
- Immunoassays (e.g., TSH, 17-OHP).
- Enzyme assays (e.g., G6PD).
- Confirmation: Specific enzyme/molecular tests if initial screen positive.

⭐ Tandem Mass Spectrometry (MS/MS) is the workhorse, enabling multiplex screening from a single dried blood spot.
Key Disorders Spotlight - Tiny Trouble Spotters
- Congenital Hypothyroidism (CH)
- Defect: Thyroid dysgenesis/dyshormonogenesis
- Screen: ↑TSH, ↓T4
- Clinical: Prolonged jaundice, hoarse cry, macroglossia. Preventable intellectual disability.
- Phenylketonuria (PKU)
- Defect: Phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) deficiency
- Screen: ↑Phenylalanine (Guthrie test / MS-MS)
- Clinical: Mousy/musty odor, eczema, intellectual disability.
- Galactosemia (Classical)
- Defect: Galactose-1-Phosphate Uridyltransferase (GALT) deficiency
- Screen: ↑Total galactose (or Gal-1-P), ↓GALT activity; Beutler test
- Clinical: Jaundice, hepatomegaly, cataracts, E. coli sepsis.
- Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia (CAH)
- Defect: 21-hydroxylase deficiency (most common)
- Screen: ↑17-hydroxyprogesterone (17-OHP)
- Clinical: Ambiguous genitalia (females), salt wasting, virilization.
- G6PD Deficiency
- Defect: Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase deficiency
- Screen: Fluorescent spot test / enzyme assay
- Clinical: Neonatal jaundice, acute hemolytic anemia on oxidant stress (e.g., drugs, fava beans).
⭐ Congenital Hypothyroidism is the most common preventable cause of intellectual disability worldwide.
Results & Next Steps - Code Red Confirmation
- Positive screen (Code Red) → Immediate recall.
- Confirmatory diagnostic tests (e.g., HPLC, GC/MS, enzyme assay, molecular testing).
- Specialist consultation & management initiation.
⭐ Confirmatory tests are crucial; a positive screen is NOT a diagnosis. False positives occur, necessitating specific diagnostic assays before initiating lifelong treatment or dietary restrictions for conditions like Phenylketonuria (PKU).
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- NBS enables early detection and timely intervention for treatable genetic disorders, preventing severe complications.
- Key disorders screened in India: Congenital Hypothyroidism (CH), G6PD deficiency, Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia (CAH).
- Heel prick blood spot on Guthrie card (24-72 hours post-birth) is the standard sample.
- Tandem Mass Spectrometry (MS/MS) is pivotal for expanded screening of multiple Inborn Errors of Metabolism (IEMs).
- Confirmatory testing is mandatory for any positive screen to avoid misdiagnosis.
- PKU screening often uses Guthrie test or MS/MS; detects phenylalanine hydroxylase deficiency related issues.
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