Nowadays, most of the neonatal screening programs for cystic fibrosis (CF) combine the assay of immunoreactive trypsinogen (IRT) with the analysis of the most common mutations of the CFTR gene. The efficiency of this strategy is now well established, but the identification of heterozygotes among neonates with increased IRT is perceived as a drawback. We proposed to assess the heterozygosity frequency among the children with hypertrypsinaemia detected through the CF screening program implemented in Brittany (France) 10 years ago, to describe the CFTR mutations detected in them and to determine the frequency of the IVS8-5T variant. The molecular analysis relies, in our protocol, on the systematic analysis of three exons of the gene (7-10-11). A total of 160,019 babies were screened for CF in western Brittany between 1992 and 1998. Of the 1964 newborns with increased IRT (1.2%), 60 were CF and 213 were carriers. Heterozygosity frequency was 12.8%), i.e. 3 times greater than in the general population (3.9%; p < 10(-6)), Variability of mutations detected in carriers was greater than in CF children (21 mutations versus 10) and a high proportion of mild mutations or variants (A349V, R297Q, R347H, V317A, G544S, R553G, etc) was observed in carriers. The allelic frequency of the 5T (5.6%) was not significantly increased in this cohort. This study is consistent with previous ones in finding a significantly higher rate of heterozygotes than expected among neonates with hypertrypsinaemia. The strategy of screening used here allows to highlight the variability of mutations detected in heterozygotes and to show that severe mutations, as well as mild mutations, have been observed in neonates with hypertrypsinaemia. If there is no doubt that neonatal hypertrypsinaemia is associated with an elevated frequency of carriers, the underlying mechanisms remain obscure.
Our results emphasize the usefulness of PSA screening in high risk families, including those without obvious hereditary features. Furthermore, early onset prostate cancer is a significant risk factor for prostate cancer in first degree relatives.
Antikeratin antibodies (AKA) were found in 38 out of 96 patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA); they appeared to be quite characteristic to this disease. There was a very low incidence of AKA positivity in the control groups, i.e., 1 out of 62 healthy subjects and 4 out of 158 other patients. With regard to the sensitivity of the test as a diagnostic tool, AKA was found to be weaker than the rheumatoid factor (RF) and the antiperinuclear factor (APF), whereas the specificity was much better than APF and RF. A clear correlation was shown between the titres of AKA and APF (p less than 0.001) and also between AKA levels and inflammation (p less than 0.02).
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