1 Division of Clinical Laboratories, The Department of Medicine, Children's Hospital Medical Center, the Children's Cancer Research Foundation and Departments of Pediatrics and Pathology of the Harvard Medical School
The meconium obtained from siblings of patients with cystic fibrosis was studied for its protein content to determine whether this procedure could be used as a marker of the disease in the newborn. Over a 9-year period 196 specimens were studied. Forty-nine of the 196 infant siblings developed cystic fibrosis and only 4 of this group gave a negative protein reaction. In the remaining group of 147, the protein test was positive in 46, but in a lesser amount. Two methods of testing were employeda trichloracetic acid ring test and a slide agglutination test using antihuman albumin. Random control samples from 1,600 full-term babies yielded negative tests. This presumptive test is suggested as a possible screening method for the detection of cystic fibrosis with a reliability of approximately 90%. The measurement of sweat electrolytes, although difficult and time consuming in the newborn period, appears to be the most reliable technique of detecting cystic fibrosis.
Submitted on August 30, 1967