Screening Changes Could Help Detect Deaf Newborns
Editor: We've made considerable progress in extending infant newborn
hearing screening programs in the last few years. But researchers from
Virginia Commonwealth University and Harvard Medical School say we can do
even better. Here's the press release.
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Walter E. Nance, M.D., Ph.D., professor of human genetics in Virginia
Commonwealth University's School of Medicine, and Cynthia C. Morton, Ph.D.,
a professor of human genetics at the Harvard Medical School, have summarized
four important criteria to be considered for screening programs throughout
the country for newborn hearing defects. These include the prompt
confirmation of abnormal results from screening tests; adoption of an
etiologic focus to determine the cause of the deafness; initiation of
molecular genetic testing for all newborns; and better recognition of
infants at risk for late-onset hearing loss occurring prior to speech and
language development.
Molecular genetic testing of blood spots from all newbo rn infants for
the presence of the CMV virus, connexin deafness, Pendred syndrome and
mitochondrial mutations in the 12S rRNA gene would allow the immediate
diagnosis of the commonest forms of genetic and environmental deafness that
are expressed at birth, according to the article, published in the May 18
issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. In addition, these tests would
allow for the identification of infants at risk for the commonest genetic,
environmental and preventable causes of delayed onset prelingual deafness.
"If hearing loss is detected at birth and appropriate intervention is
promptly initiated the educational outcome for deaf infants can be
dramatically improved," said Nance, who is the corresponding author of the
article. "Although newborn hearing screening programs have improved the
lives of infants throughout the world, our report suggests several specific
ways in which these programs can be improved, including the screening of all
newborns fo r a limited number of the major genetic and environmental causes
of hearing loss."
According to Nance, who has been studying genetic deafness for more than
30 years, identifying the actual cause of the deafness can be just as
important as detecting the hearing loss. He said that data from genetic
testing would provide a powerful supplement to audiologic testing that could
greatly improve the overall effectiveness of these programs.
In 1964, Marion Downes, a distinguished audiologist, first showed that
profound deafness could be recognized in newborn infants by painstaking
observations of their response to sounds. Since that time, advances in
technology now allow the automated screening of infants by trained
technicians. At the same time, dramatic advances have been made in
understanding the causes of deafness.
In addition to many environmental causes of deafness, researchers have
identified more than 100 genes that are linked to deafness. Nance said that
approximately 50 percent to 60 percent of childhood hearing loss in
developed countries is due to genetic factors.
Hearing is essential for the normal acquisition of speech. According to
Nance, if oral or sign language is not acquired during a critical
developmental stage, deaf children may never achieve their full
developmental potential. Other studies have indicated that early detection
of hearing loss and intervention can improve the educational and social
outcomes of these newborns.
This work was supported in part by a grant from the National Institute on
Deafness and Other Communication Disorders.
About VCU and the VCU Medical Center: Located on two downtown campuses in
Richmond, Va., Virginia Commonwealth University is ranked nationally by the
Carnegie Foundation as a top research institution and enrolls more than
29,000 students in more than 181 certificate, undergraduate, graduate,
professional and doctoral programs in the arts, sciences and hum anities in
15 schools and one college. Forty of the university's programs are unique in
Virginia, and 20 graduate and professional programs have been ranked by U.S.
News & World Report as among the best of their kind. MCV Hospitals, clinics
and the health sciences schools of Virginia Commonwealth University compose
the VCU Medical Center, one of the leading academic medical centers in the
country. For more, see http://www.vcu.edu