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Variability in Newborn Screening Across Canada: Spinal Muscular Atrophy and Beyond

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 March 2023

Emilie Groulx-Boivin
Affiliation:
Department of Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada
Homira Osman
Affiliation:
Muscular Dystrophy Canada, Canada Neuromuscular Disease Network of Canada, Canada
Pranesh Chakraborty
Affiliation:
Newborn Screening Ontario, Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario, ON, Canada
Stacey Lintern
Affiliation:
Muscular Dystrophy Canada, Canada
Maryam Oskoui
Affiliation:
Departments of Pediatrics and Neurology and Neurosurgery, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada Centre for Outcomes Research and Evaluation, Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, QC, Canada
Kathryn Selby
Affiliation:
Division of Neurology, Department of Pediatrics, University of British Columbia, British Columbia’s Children’s Hospital, Vancouver, BC, Canada
Paul Van Caeseele
Affiliation:
Cadham Provincial Laboratory, Winnipeg, MB, Canada
Alexandra Wyatt
Affiliation:
Newborn Screening Ontario, Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario, ON, Canada
Hugh J. McMillan*
Affiliation:
Departments of Pediatrics and Neurology and Neurosurgery, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada Department of Pediatrics, Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada
*
Corresponding author: Hugh J. McMillan, Departments of Pediatrics, Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario, University of Ottawa, 401 Smyth Road, Ottawa, ON K1H 8L1 Canada. Email: [email protected]
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Abstract:

Background:

Newborn screening (NBS) identifies infants with severe, early-onset diseases, enabling early diagnosis and treatment. In Canada, decisions regarding disease inclusion in NBS programs occur at the provincial level, which leads to variability in patient care. We aimed to determine whether important differences exist in NBS programs across provinces and territories. Given that spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is the most recent disease added to NBS programs, we hypothesized that its inclusion would show interprovincial variability and be more likely in provinces already screening for a greater number of diseases.

Methods:

We conducted a cross-sectional survey of all NBS labs in Canada to understand: 1) what conditions were included in their program; 2) what genetic-based testing was performed and; 3) if SMA was included.

Results:

All NBS programs (N = 8) responded to this survey by June 2022. There was a 2.5-fold difference in the number of conditions screened (N = 14 vs N = 36) and a 9-fold difference in the number of conditions screened by gene-based testing. Only nine conditions were common to all provincial NBS programs. NBS for SMA was performed in four provinces at the time of our survey, with BC recently becoming the fifth province to add SMA to their NBS on October 1, 2022. Currently, 72% of Canadian newborns are screened for SMA at birth.

Conclusion:

Although healthcare in Canada is universal, its decentralization gives rise to regional differences in NBS programs which creates inequity in the treatment, care, and potential outcomes of affected children across provincial jurisdictions.

Résumé :

RÉSUMÉ :

Variabilité du dépistage néonatal au Canada dans le cas de l’amyotrophie spinale et d’autres affections.

Contexte :

Le dépistage néonatal (DNN) permet d’identifier les nourrissons atteints d’affections graves et précoces, ce qui permet d’établir un diagnostic et un traitement de manière précoce. Au Canada, les décisions concernant l’inclusion d’affections dans les programmes de DNN sont prises au niveau des provinces, ce qui entraîne une variabilité dans les soins destinés aux patients. Nous avons ainsi cherché à déterminer s’il existe des différences marquées dans les programmes de DNN parmi les provinces et les territoires. Étant donné que l’amyotrophie spinale (AS) est la maladie la plus récemment ajoutée aux programmes de DNN, nous avons émis l’hypothèse que son inclusion donnerait à voir une variabilité interprovinciale et serait plus probable dans les provinces qui dépistent déjà un plus grand nombre d’affections.

Méthodes :

Nous avons mené une enquête transversale auprès de tous les laboratoires de DNN au Canada afin de mieux comprendre : 1) les conditions rattachées aux programmes de DNN ; 2) les tests génétiques qui sont effectués ; 3) si l’AS était incluse.

Résultats :

Tous les programmes de DNN (n = 8) ont répondu à cette enquête avant juin 2022. On a noté une différence de l’ordre de 2,5 dans le nombre d’affections dépistées (n = 14 contre n = 36) et une différence de l’ordre de 9 dans le nombre d’affections dépistées par des tests génétiques. À noter que seulement neuf affections étaient communes à tous les programmes provinciaux de DNN. Le programme de DNN pour l’AS était en vigueur dans quatre provinces au moment de notre enquête, la Colombie-Britannique étant devenue la cinquième province à ajouter l’AS à son DNN le 1er octobre 2022. À l’heure actuelle, 72 % des nouveau-nés canadiens font l’objet d’un dépistage de l’AS à la naissance.

Conclusion :

Bien que les soins de santé au Canada soient universels, leur décentralisation donne lieu à des différences régionales en ce qui regarde les programmes de DNN, ce qui entraîne presque certainement, d’une juridiction provinciale à l’autre, une inégalité significative sur le plan des traitements, des soins et de l’évolution de l’état de santé des enfants atteints.

Type
Original Article
Creative Commons
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Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Canadian Neurological Sciences Federation.

Introduction

The goal of newborn screening (NBS) is to identify newborns with potentially disabling conditions for which early detection may allow for treatment initiation to reduce or eliminate disease symptoms. Diseases selected for inclusion in NBS programs share several characteristics including: 1) well-known natural history with the majority of affected patients showing severe and early-onset disease; 2) screening tests that are robust and reliable; 3) treatment that is effective, acceptable, and uniformly accessible to all patients; 4) societal acceptance that the benefits of early diagnosis outweigh risks associated with potential harm from false diagnosis, premature diagnosis, and/or over-treatment and; 5) evidence that screening is cost-effective.Reference Andermann, Blancquaert, Beauchamp and Dery1

Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) has been included in an increasing number of NBS programs. It is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by irreversible loss of motor neurons causing progressive muscle atrophy and weakness. Reference Nicolau, Waldrop, Connolly and Mendell2 Estimated to affect 1 in 10,000 live born infants, Reference Verhaart, Robertson and Wilson3 SMA is one of the leading genetic conditions contributing to infant mortality. Reference Jalali, Rothwell, Botkin, Anderson, Butterfield and Nelson4 SMA results from pathogenic variants affecting both SMN1 alleles, although a paralogous gene, SMN2, has a disease-modifying effect where a lower number of SMN2 copies is predictive of a more severe and earlier-onset phenotype. Reference Andermann, Blancquaert, Beauchamp and Dery1 While 95% of affected individuals have the more common homozygous deletion of SMN1 exon 7, 5% are compound heterozygotes with an SMN1 deletion and SMN1 point mutation affecting each allele. Reference Verhaart, Robertson and Wilson3 Three therapies for SMA have been approved by Health Canada including nusinersen (approved in June 2017), onasemnogene abeparvovec (in December 2020), and risdiplam (in April 2021). Public reimbursement or coverage for at least one of these therapies is currently available in all Canadian provinces. Clinical trials for all disease-modifying therapies have demonstrated that presymptomatic treatment is associated with the greatest improvement in survival and motor milestone acquisition. Reference De Vivo, Bertini and Swoboda5Reference Finkel, Farrar and Vlodavets8 Accordingly, several NBS programs for SMA are emerging around the world to allow for earlier diagnosis and treatment initiation. Reference Dangouloff, Vršcaj, Servais and Osredkar9

Canada does not have a nationally accepted screening panel for hereditary disorders, and all decisions pertaining to disease inclusion in NBS programs are made at the provincial level. Consequently, there is a potential for variability to arise among provinces. In the USA, there had been similar concerns regarding lack of uniformity among states which led to the creation of a Recommended Uniform Screening Panel (RUSP). An expert committee in the US Department of Health and Human Services provides evidence-based recommendations regarding which conditions are recommended for inclusion in each state’s NBS program. Reference Watson, Mann, Lloyd-Puryear, Rinaldo and Howell10 Their proceedings and decisions are published in an open and transparent manner with the goal of encouraging states to use evidence and work toward uniformity in their NBS programs.

Our goal was to determine the total number and specific conditions that are part of NBS programs in each Canadian province and territory to understand similarities and differences. We identified which provincial NBS programs used gene-based testing, as this is required for an increasing number of childhood-onset diseases for which therapies are emerging including SMA. In view of provincial approvals and access to disease-modifying therapies for SMA, we also sought to more specifically explore which provinces included or planned to include SMA into their NBS program.

Methods

Study Design and Data Collection

We conducted a cross-sectional study of all provincial and territorial NBS programs in Canada. Each medical or laboratory director was sent an online survey that was composed of 22 questions designed to obtain information regarding: 1) all conditions included in NBS for each province at this time; 2) conditions screened using genetic-based testing; and 3) if the province included SMA in their NBS program. The survey required approximately 10–15 minutes to complete and remained open for 22 days. All surveys were completed by June 10, 2022. REB review was not required as this study met deferral criteria as a quality assurance study.

Conditions that were included in each province’s NBS were categorized as either primary, secondary, or additional as per their classification by the RUSP as of May 2022. 11,12 Since there is no equivalent to the RUSP in Canada, we sought an objective tool to not arbitrarily select one Canadian province as a “gold standard” over others.

Results

Responses were obtained from 8/8 (100%) medical or laboratory directors (N = 7) or geneticists (N = 1) representing all provincial NBS programs in Canada. One respondent was contacted representing the three Maritime Provinces (Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island). NBS for the three Canadian territories proceed as follows: Nunavut Territory NBS samples are sent on a regional basis to Ontario, Manitoba, or Alberta; Northwest Territories NBS are sent to Alberta and; Yukon Territory NBS are sent to British Columbia. As such, the conditions included in each territorial NBS program were inferred from the province(s) where testing was carried out.

NBS Programs

Although all Canadian provinces perform NBS, the number of conditions screened ranged from 14 to 36, which represents a 2.5-fold difference between the provinces screening the fewest to the largest number of infant-onset conditions (Table 1).

Table 1: Diseases included in newborn screening by Canadian provinces organized by the RUSP

AB = Alberta, BC = British Columbia; MB = Manitoba; NB = New Brunswick; NS = Nova Scotia; NL = Newfoundland; ON = Ontario; PE = Prince Edward Island; QC = Quebec; SK = Saskatchewan; def.=deficiency; ß-thal.=ß-thalassemia; LCHAD = long-chain-3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase; MCAD = medium-chain-acyl-CoA dehydrogenase; MMA = methylmalonic acid; 3MCC = 3-methylcrotonyl-CoA carboxylate; VLCAD = very-long-chain acylCoA dehydrogenase; HHH = hyperornithinemia-hyperammonemia-homocitrullinuria; RT-PCR = reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction; TREC = T-cell receptor excision circle.

Diseases included in provincial and territorial newborn screening (NBS) programs were grouped as core primary, secondary, or additional diseases as outlined in the Recommended Uniform Screening Panel (RUSP) as described in text. Data is correct as of June 2022. NBS is performed in Canadian territories as follows: Nunavut Territory NBS samples are sent on a regional basis to either ON, MB or AB; Northwest Territory NBS samples are sent to AB; and Yukon Territory is sent to BC. The RUSP lists include primary diseases (N = 36) and secondary disease (N = 25). Bold rows reflect the nine (N = 9) disorders that are screened in all Canadian provinces and territories.

British Columbia (BC) added spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) and severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) to its NBS panel on October 1, 2022.

$Citrullinemia was not differentiated between type 1 and/or type 2 on our survey;

&For targeted populations and; Allele-specific RT-PCR for non-TREC-deficient ZAP-70 and IKBKB founder mutations.

* Secondary diseases on RUSP that are not included in provincial NBS program include: malonic academia; medium- and short-chain L-3-hydroxyacyl-CoA-dehydrogenase deficiency; medium-chain ketoacyl-CoA thiolase deficiency; arginemia; galactoepimerase deficiency; galactokinase deficiency; benign hyperphenylalinemia; biopterin co-factor defects; glutaric aciduria type 2; isobutyrlglycinuria; hypermethioninemia; short-chain acyl CoA dehydrogenase deficiency; tyrosinemia type 2 and 3; 2-methylbutyrylglycinuria; 2-methyl-3-OH-butyric academia; 3-methyl-glutaconic aciduria; lymphocyte deficiencies; and other hemoglobinopathies.

^Additional diseases are those not included in RUSP such as: ethylmalonic encephalopathy; multiple carboxylase deficiency; non-ketotic hyperglycinemia; ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency; pyruvate carboxylase deficiency; and S-adenoslyhomocyteine hydroxylase deficiency.

Among the RUSP primary diseases (N = 36), the number of conditions included in provincial NBS programs ranged from 14 to 30. Only nine (N = 9) conditions were common across all provincial NBS programs in Canada and included cystic fibrosis (CF), congenital hypothyroidism (CH), glutaric aciduria type 1 (GA1), long-chain-3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase (LCHAD) deficiency, maple syrup urine disease (MSUD), medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD) deficiency, mitochondrial trifunctional protein deficiency, phenylketonuria (PKU), and very long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (VLCAD) deficiency. Regional differences exist for all remaining disorders, which are included in some but not all programs. Among RUSP secondary diseases (N = 25), Canadian NBS programs included 0 to 3 of these conditions.

NBS Using Genetic Testing

Testing for some infant-onset disorders cannot be performed using biochemical or other phenotypic testing, and a form of genetic testing is required to identify the presence or absence of predicted disease. Genetic-based testing in NBS also showed variability among provinces with some provinces only performing gene-based testing for CF (Quebec, Newfoundland), while others used gene-based testing platforms to screen for up to nine childhood-onset disorders (Ontario). Table 2 provides an overview of genetic-based testing including platforms used for each condition in provincial NBS programs, based on the information provided by the respondents.

Table 2: Genetic-based newborn screening testing in Canadian provinces

GAMT = guanidinoacetate methyltransferase deficiency; HHH = hyperornithinemia-hyperammonemia-homocitrullinuria; IKBKB = inhibitor of nuclear factor kappa B kinase subunit beta; IRT-DNA-IRT = immunoreactive trypsinogen-deoxyribonucleic acid-immunoreactive trypsinogen; MLPA = multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification; MMA = methylmalonic academia; NGS = next-generation sequencing; PCR = polymerase chain reaction; qPCR=quantitative polymerase chain reaction; RT-PCR = reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction; TREC = T-cell receptor excision circle; ZAP-70 = zeta-chain-associated protein kinase-70.

* British Columbia began testing for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) and severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) using MLPA (first tier) on Oct 1, 2022.

^For targeted populations.

Includes allele-specific RT-PCR for non-TREC deficient ZAP-70 and IKBKB founder mutations.

NBS for SMA

As of June 2022, NBS for SMA was performed in four Canadian provinces: Alberta, Manitoba, Ontario, and Saskatchewan, as well as two Canadian territories: Nunavut and the Northwest Territories (Figure 1). Based on 2021 birth estimates from Statistics Canada, 13 60% of Canadian newborns were screened at birth for SMA (Supplemental Table 1). Those four provinces that screened for SMA were also the four provinces with the greatest number of conditions included in their NBS program.

Figure 1: Newborn screening programs for SMA presently include 72% of Canadian newborns. Legend: Solid green = provinces and territories screening for SMA as of June 2022. Hatched green = BC and YT that began screening for SMA as of October 1, 2022. Grey = provinces that do not currently include SMA as part of their NBS panel. SMA = spinal muscular atrophy; YT = Yukon; NT = Northwest Territories; NU = Nunavut; BC = British Columbia; AB = Alberta; SK = Saskatchewan; MB = Manitoba; ON = Ontario; QC = Quebec; NL = Newfoundland and Labrador; NB = New Brunswick, PE = Prince Edward Island; NS = Nova Scotia. NB, NS, PE, NL, and QC have announced plans to initiate NBS screening for SMA, but no formal start date has been set at the time of publication. Provincial and territorial birth rates from Statistics Canada. 13 Figure was designed using MapChart.24

Ontario was the first Canadian province to begin screening for SMA in January 2020, Reference McMillan, Kernohan and Yeh14 initially as a 6-month pilot funded by Biogen, before being accepted into the list of conditions screened in its NBS program. Alberta began screening as a 1-year pilot study and Manitoba as a 2-year pilot study, both funded by Muscular Dystrophy Canada, before each province accepted SMA into its provincial NBS program. In contrast, Saskatchewan implemented NBS for SMA immediately without a preceding pilot phase. British Columbia (BC) added SMA to their NBS program on October 1, 2022, after the completion of our survey and after the manuscript was submitted for peer review. Since BC also performs NBS for the Yukon, this new implementation increased the number of Canadian provinces screening for SMA to 5 and the number of territories to 3. It also increased the proportion of Canadian infants screened for SMA at birth to 72% (Supplemental Table 1). For the other provinces not screening for SMA, their respective provincial governments and/or responsible decision-making committees have committed to including SMA in their NBS programs in the near future.

There are numerous techniques used in NBS for SMA including quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR), multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA), MassArray, and droplet digital polymerase chain reaction (ddPCR), all of which can potentially be used to determine SMN1 deletion status and SMN2 copy number. The testing platform(s) used for NBS for SMA varied among provinces. In Ontario, MassArray is used as the first tier of screening with MLPA used as a second tier. Reference Watson, Mann, Lloyd-Puryear, Rinaldo and Howell10 In contrast, Alberta, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan use qPCR is as a first-tier test. BC, the most recent province to initiate testing, uses MLPA as a first-tier test. Confirmatory testing in commercial laboratories utilizes MLPA testing to detect the SMN1 deletion.

Similar to other jurisdictions, the testing platforms used in Canadian provinces screen for the common exon 7 deletion and will not detect SMN1 point mutations which are seen in a small proportion of patients with SMA.

Differences also exist in what constitutes a positive screening test among Canadian provinces. The Saskatchewan NBS program reports all biallelic SMN1 deletions, whereas Alberta, Manitoba, Ontario, and more recently BC only report newborns with biallelic SMN1 deletions who also have ≤4 copies of SMN2. With regard to obtaining parental consent for NBS for SMA, Alberta currently uses an opt-out process, whereas most provinces perform SMA screening alongside other standard NBS tests and do not require any SMA-specific consent.

When asked the reason(s) for not including SMA in NBS programs, the lack of or delayed governmental funding for its inclusion was the most commonly identified obstacle, followed by a lack of financial and human resources.

Among provinces actively screening for SMA, the target time to obtain the results of the initial screen ranged from 4 to 10 days, while the target time for the initiation of disease-modifying therapy ranged from 10 to 30 days from the initial blood sampling. In Saskatchewan, an application for disease-modifying treatment coverage can be submitted to the provincial health insurance plan after a positive NBS test for SMA. By comparison, most Canadian provinces require a positive confirmatory genetic test prior to application submission, which can result in an additional 1–2 week(s) delay in initiating treatment for children with a rapidly progressive disease characterized by the irreversible loss of motor neurons.

All four provinces that included SMA in their NBS also performed other gene-based screening for severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) using reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) among other genetic tests (Table 2). BC began testing for both SMA and SCID at the same time, using MLPA testing.

Discussion

Regional differences exist with regard to NBS within Canada with some provinces including 2.5-fold more conditions in their NBS program compared to others. In addition, the use of genetic-based NBS shows an even greater degree of variability with as much as a 9-fold difference in the number of conditions included in provincial NBS programs. This creates inequity in the prevention and treatment of disease in Canadian born children. Infants born with a treatable, rare disease in one Canadian province or territory with a more comprehensive NBS program benefit from early diagnosis and presymptomatic treatment. By comparison, Canadian children born in another province may only be identified with the same rare disease after an acute life-threatening event or irreversible loss of tissue, thus reducing the potential benefit of otherwise effective disease-modifying therapies. Moreover, there may be a lesser potential for long-term survival or attaining neurodevelopmental milestones with delayed treatment initiation.

Long delays between symptom onset and diagnosis have been well described for some rare diseases. Children who are symptomatic with the most severe, infant-onset form of SMA (i.e., type I) experience a mean delay in the time from symptom onset to diagnosis of 2.5 months. Reference Lin, Kalb and Yeh15 The mean delay to diagnosis for SMA type II, where symptom onset occurs between 6 and 18 months old, is over 12 months. Reference Lin, Kalb and Yeh15 Delays to diagnosis were primarily attributed to patients having to visit multiple healthcare professionals to exclude other diagnoses prior to undergoing genetic testing for SMA. Reference Lin, Kalb and Yeh15 Such delays in diagnosis represent a lost opportunity, particularly given the rapid and irreversible progression of SMA where the life expectancy ranges from a median of 8 months Reference Kolb, Coffey and Yankey16 to a mean of 10-1/2 months Reference Finkel, McDermott and Kaufmann17 for infants with SMA type I (typically 2xSMN2 copies) unless given continuous ventilator support and/or receiving disease-modifying therapy.

As of January 2023, approximately 72% of Canadian newborns are screened for SMA at birth. This stands in contrast to the USA where NBS for SMA is performed in 48 of 50 states, ensuring that 98% of American newborns are tested at birth. 18 Globally, nine countries or jurisdictions had already included SMA into their NBS programs as of December 2020. Reference Dangouloff, Vršcaj, Servais and Osredkar9 Overall, very low rates of false positives have been reported around the world, and the opt-out consent process was found to have higher rates of acceptability relative to opt-in. Reference Dangouloff, Vršcaj, Servais and Osredkar9 To date, there have been no reported cases of false positives in Ontario. However, the NBS programs for SMA in other Canadian provinces have not been in place for a sufficient amount of time to gather reliable data on false-positive rates. In the USA, state NBS programs received financial and educational support from the Newborn Screening Technical Assistance and Evaluation Program (NewSTEPs) to facilitate the implementation of screening for SMA. Reference Hale, Ojodu and Singh19 The mean time required to fully implement statewide screening for SMA was 24 months, which is considerably shorter than what was reported for other conditions including Pompe and mucopolysaccharidosis type I. Reference Hale, Ojodu and Singh19

As more provinces begin to include SMA in their NBS program, it will be important to document the time from sample acquisition (typically on blood spot paper) to when confirmatory diagnosis is made, and disease-modifying treatment is initiated. Over 40% of SMA patients identified in an Australian NBS program showed clear onset of clinical symptoms within the first weeks of life, Reference Kariyawasam, Russell, Wiley, Alexander and Farrar20 underscoring the need for efficiency even after the NBS specimen is acquired. Allowing applications for disease-modifying therapies to be submitted for review after a positive screen, and for other testing (e.g., AAV9 antibody status for potential gene therapy, baseline CHOP-INTEND motor scales) to be done in tandem with application review, can help streamline this process so that eventual approval occurs more quickly once diagnosis is confirmed. Physicians will need to understand interprovincial variability regarding the availability of NBS, as well as variability in the provincial definitions of a “positive” versus a “negative” NBS test for SMA, since this has the potential to create confusion and further delay for yet-diagnosed children moving from one province to another.

Lastly, cost efficacy analysis has demonstrated an economic value for universal NBS for SMA in countries and jurisdictions where disease-modifying therapy is available. Reference Jalali, Rothwell, Botkin, Anderson, Butterfield and Nelson4,Reference Dangouloff, Hiligsmann and Deconinck21 Australian data have also reported NBS, coupled with early gene therapy, to be cost-effective and to improve the quality and length of life for children with SMA. Reference Shih, Farrar, Wiley and Chambers22

Conclusion

NBS represents an opportunity for the early identification of infants with a range of severe or potentially fatal diseases, facilitating diagnosis even prior to the onset of symptoms. Although healthcare in Canada is universal, its decentralization gives rise to regional differences in the provision of care. NBS is an example where regional variations exist, with the number of diseases included in NBS programs ranging from 14 to 36. SMA is currently included in NBS programs screening Canadian children born in five provinces and all three territories. As of January 2023, 72% of Canadian newborns benefit from early or presymptomatic diagnosis of SMA. This discrepancy leads to significant differences in survival and motor outcomes including the higher probability to have sufficient strength to walk compared to those diagnosed after symptoms have appeared. Learning from the USA experience, Canadian provinces must work to standardize NBS panels across the country to reduce the existing inequities that can have life-altering consequences for children born in some but not other areas within our country. These results emphasize the importance of the key guiding principle of Canadian healthcare: universality and equity, regardless of which Canadian province or territory a child is born in.

Supplementary Material

To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/cjn.2023.34.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank the NBS medical and laboratory directors for their collaboration and willingness to share data pertaining to provincial NBS program.

Author contribution

EGB and HO collected data for this study. EGB, HO, and HJM drafted the manuscript. HJM, MO, and HO conceptualized this study. PC, SL, MO, KS, PVC, and AW provided a critical review of the manuscript. All authors approve the manuscript in its final form.

Funding

Funding was provided by Muscular Dystrophy Canada.

Conflict of interest

EGB reports funding from Muscular Dystrophy Canada (MDC) to cover manuscript open access fees and to attend an international conference to present this data. HO reports no conflict of interest. PC has received grant/research support (MDC, Biomarin, Takeda, Biogen, Cambrooke, Vitaflo, Nutricia, NFDC, Perkin Elmer, CIHR, CF Foundation), honorarium for speakers fees (Novartis) and has been a member of advisory boards (Sanofi, Ultragenyx, Waters, Horizon). He is a senior medical advisor for the Ontario Ministry of Health Laboratories and Diagnostics Branch and a co-chair of the Ontario Genetics Advisory Committee.

SL reports no conflicts of interest. MO reports having received operating grants (MDC, CIHR) and has been a site investigator on clinical trials (Roche Genetech, Novartis). She is an unpaid member of MDC Scientific Advisory Committee. KS reports funding from the Neuromuscular Disease 4 Canada (NMD4C) consortium. She has received speaking fees (Novartis, Roche) and an advisory board (Roche). She has a leadership role in NMD4C and the Canadian Neuromuscular Disease Registry (CNDR). PVC reports institutional support from MDC and volunteer member of the Canadian Immunity Task Force. AW reports no conflict of interest

HJM reports funding from MDC to cover open access fees for this publication. He has been a site principal investigator on clinical trials (Novartis/AveXis, Roche, Sarepta, ReveraGen, Catabasis, PTC Therapeutics). He has received honoraria for consultancy (Novartis, Roche), speaking fees (Novartis), and research support (Roche).

Abbreviations

CHOP-INTEND = Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Infant Test of Neuromuscular Disorders

ddPCR = digital droplet polymerase chain reaction

MLPA = multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification

NBS = newborn screening

qPCR = quantitative polymerase chain reaction

RT-PCR = reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction

RUSP = Recommended Uniform Screening Panel

SMA = spinal muscular atrophy

SMN1 = survival motor neuron 1 gene

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Figure 0

Table 1: Diseases included in newborn screening by Canadian provinces organized by the RUSP

Figure 1

Table 2: Genetic-based newborn screening testing in Canadian provinces

Figure 2

Figure 1: Newborn screening programs for SMA presently include 72% of Canadian newborns. Legend: Solid green = provinces and territories screening for SMA as of June 2022. Hatched green = BC and YT that began screening for SMA as of October 1, 2022. Grey = provinces that do not currently include SMA as part of their NBS panel. SMA = spinal muscular atrophy; YT = Yukon; NT = Northwest Territories; NU = Nunavut; BC = British Columbia; AB = Alberta; SK = Saskatchewan; MB = Manitoba; ON = Ontario; QC = Quebec; NL = Newfoundland and Labrador; NB = New Brunswick, PE = Prince Edward Island; NS = Nova Scotia. NB, NS, PE, NL, and QC have announced plans to initiate NBS screening for SMA, but no formal start date has been set at the time of publication. Provincial and territorial birth rates from Statistics Canada.13 Figure was designed using MapChart.24

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