PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Qiuju Wang AU - Jiale Xiang AU - Jun Sun AU - Yun Yang AU - Jing Guan AU - Dayong Wang AU - Cui Song AU - Ling Guo AU - Hongyang Wang AU - Yaqiu Chen AU - Junhong Leng AU - Xiaman Wang AU - Junqing Zhang AU - Bing Han AU - Jing Zou AU - Chengbin Yan AU - Lidong Zhao AU - Hongyu Luo AU - Yuan Han AU - Wen Yuan AU - Hongyun Zhang AU - Wei Wang AU - Jian Wang AU - Huanming Yang AU - Xun Xu AU - Ye Yin AU - Cynthia C. Morton AU - Lijian Zhao AU - Shida Zhu AU - Jun Shen AU - Zhiyu Peng TI - Nationwide population genetic screening improves outcomes of newborn screening for hearing loss in China AID - 10.1101/502088 DP - 2018 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 502088 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/12/20/502088.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/12/20/502088.full AB - Purpose Concurrent newborn hearing and genetic screening has been reported, but its benefits have not been statistically proven due to limited sample sizes and outcome data. To fill this gap, we analyzed outcomes of a large number of newborns with genetic screening results.Methods Newborns in China were screened for 20 hearing-loss-related genetic variants from 2012–2017. Genetic results were categorized as positive, at-risk, inconclusive, or negative. Hearing screening results, risk factors, and up-to-date hearing status were followed-up via phone interviews.Results We completed genetic screening on one million newborns and followed up 12,778. We found that a positive genetic result significantly indicated a higher positive predictive value of the initial hearing screening (60% vs. 5.0%, P<0.001) and a lower rate of loss-to-follow-up (5% vs. 22%, P<0.001) than an inconclusive one. Importantly, 42% of subjects in the positive group with reported or presymptomatic hearing loss were “missed” by conventional hearing screening. Furthermore, genetic screening identified 0.23% of subjects predisposed to preventable ototoxicity.Conclusion Our results demonstrate that limited genetic screening identified additional cases, reduced loss-to-follow-up, and informed families of ototoxicity risks, providing convincing evidence to support integrating genetic screening into universal newborn hearing screening programs.