Ngā mate e kitea ana pea i te whakamātau poka rekereke Disorders screened for in the heel prick test (newborn blood spot screening)
All of the screened disorders are rare. They are usually inherited from one or both parents. Your first pēpi (baby) may not have a disorder, but you may have pēpi in the future who are born with a disorder. Different genetic conditions cause each disorder and affect important processes in the body.
About metabolic disorders
Disorders can vary in:
- when they appear
- how severe they are
- how they are inherited.
Without treatment, screened disorders can range from mild to acute life-threatening.
Disorders screened for
Newborn screening tests for the following disorders:
- congenital hypothyroidism
- cystic fibrosis
- amino acid disorders
- fatty acid oxidation disorders
- congenital adrenal hyperplasia
- galactosaemia
- biotinidase deficiency
- severe combined immune deficiency
- spinal muscular atrophy from late 2024 (this will be updated once start date confirmed).
Sometimes new disorders are added to the screening programme, and others are removed.
Why disorders are removed
Disorders are removed where they no longer meet screening criteria, for example, new evidence was assessed by clinical experts and it was agreed that a disorder should no longer be screened. This may be:
- due to screening for that disorder having insufficient clinical benefit for the child
- if it was determined that the criteria for screening suitability were not being met due to a high number of false positive results, and lack of true cases detected.
Last updated: