The ability to use DBS to measure ASA protein and activity will simplify procedures for collection, handling, and storage of patient samples. The ease of transporting DBS, combined with the diagnostic sensitivity and specificity of these assays, provide a powerful approach to the diagnosis of MLD. After further investigation and validation, these assays may be used for newborn screening for MLD and other lysosomal storage disorders. Importantly, the inability to differentiate ASA-PD from ASA by the activity assay alone suggests that ASA protein determination from DBS may be the most appropriate screening approach for newborns, as has recently been proposed in a report of a multiplex immune-quantification assay (5 ).