Diagnostic yield from routine metabolic screening tests in evaluation of global developmental delay and intellectual disability
Hilary Vallance, Graham Sinclair, Bojana Rakić, Sylvia Stöckler‐Ipsiroglu
Abstract
Global developmental delay and intellectual disability (GDD/ID) affect 3% of the paediatric population. Although inborn errors of metabolism (IEM) are not a common cause of GDD/ID, early therapeutic intervention can improve neurodevelopmental manifestations. In 2012, a first-tier test panel, including specialized metabolic and routine chemistry tests, was piloted to community-based paediatricians in British Columbia with aims to achieve earlier diagnosis of treatable IEM. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this retrospective review was to evaluate the diagnostic yield from these first-tier tests in the 7 years before (2006 to 2012) and after (2013 to 2019) implementation at the community paediatrician level. RESULTS: Prior and postimplementation diagnostic yield of an IEM from first-tier metabolic testing was 9 out of 986 (0.91%) and 11 out of 4,345 children (0.25%), respectively. Disorders of creatine metabolism and organic acidurias were the most frequently established diagnoses in both time periods. No diagnoses were established through acylcarnitine copper/ceruloplasmin, lactate, or ammonia testing. Twenty out of 24 patients had specific neurological or other red flag signs in addition to GDD/ID. Four boys diagnosed with an x-linked creatine transporter defect (CTD) had speech-language delay as the most prominent finding. CONCLUSIONS: The expansion of first-tier metabolic testing to community-based paediatricians in BC did not yield an increase in IEM diagnoses. A modified first-tier test panel should be offered to patients with GDD/ID, neurologic, and/or red flag signs. Urine creatine testing in boys with speech-language delay warrants consideration to detect CTD.