Integrating newborn screening for spinal muscular atrophy into health care systems: an Australian pilot programme

Newborn bloodspot screening (NBS) continues to be one of the most successful population health programmes, yielding greatly improved health outcomes for identified cases achieved by a combination of very early diagnosis and expedient initiation of treatment and management.1 New technologies and innovative treatments are now improving the capacity to identify many previously untreatable serious disorders, which could be included in NBS programmes. An exemplar is spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), wherein genetic therapies have transformed the clinical landscape from a lethal to a treatable disease. In this condition, a shift towards pre- or early symptomatic treatment optimizes outcomes for patients, before irreversible motor neuron loss.2 Results from interventional studies in treated presymptomatic infants with fewer than four survival motor neuron 2 (SMN2) gene copies have demonstrated maintenance of respiratory and bulbar function and achievement of typical motor developmental milestones.3 Accordingly, increasing numbers of NBS programmes are adding SMA to screening panels, using genetic technologies as a first-tier assay on dried bloodspots to identify deletion in exon 7 of the survival motor neuron 1 (SMN1) gene which forms the genetic basis of disease.4-7

Enhancing the quality, efficiency, and effectiveness of NBS services to care for infants and families with SMA is important for improving utility, facilitating sustainability, and maintaining public trust. To support NBS readiness and inclusion of new disorders into NBS programmes, barriers and facilitators have been identified including establishing screening algorithms, follow-up protocols, and education materials for each condition.8 Recommended international best practice for NBS services highlights the importance of seamless integration of laboratory and clinical services for facilitating rapid diagnostic confirmation, early treatment and providing long-term support for patients and families, as well as effective programme evaluation.9

The New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory NBS pilot programme for SMA started in August 2018 to inform assessment of practice and policy requirements for inclusion of SMA as a routine element within national NBS. Our initial report described the screening and diagnostic pathway (efficiency and timelines), clinical characteristics, and short-term health outcomes for the first 12 months for our screen-positive cohort.10

In the current study, we describe the development and implementation of a patient-centred programme that enables earliest possible diagnosis and therapeutic intervention. We outline the challenges encountered and solutions implemented to establish a framework that enables timely delivery of first-tier screening genomic technologies and innovative therapies that include use of antisense oligonucleotides, gene therapies, and oral splicing modifiers. We envisage that findings from the pilot programme will guide the successful translation of new genomic technologies and NBS services for SMA into clinical practice and sustainable health policy.

METHOD The setting and NBS procedures

Each year the New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory NBS programme offers screening for over 30 congenital conditions among about 100 000 newborn infants across a total area of 803 508km2, detecting approximately 100 newborn infants who require urgent clinical assessment and treatment. Participation in the programme is strongly encouraged, rather than being compulsory. Parents’ attention is drawn to the recently added SMA pilot and that it is an opt-out programme. Affected newborn infants and their families are supported by the Australian public health system, which provides primary care, public hospitals, specialist services, and outpatient pharmaceuticals.

Details of the development of the SMA-related screening procedures, including consent, methodology, screening, and diagnostic and post-screening surveillance pathways, have been described previously.10 Infants with screening results indicating absence of SMN1 exon 7 alleles were classified as screen positive. This methodology did not detect newborn infants with heterozygous deletions or point mutations on the SMN1 gene (constituting 2%–5% of the population with SMA). To enable proficiency testing during the pilot study, SMN2 copy number did not determine screen positivity.

Study design and participants

A hybrid type 2 implementation-effectiveness study design alongside the SQUIRE guidelines was used, with simultaneous evaluation of outcomes (time frames, coverage, sensitivity, specificity, false-positive rate, false-negative rate, positive predictive value for tested dried bloodspots after initial laboratory validation) and implementational factors.11, 12 The knowledge-to-action process framework, a dynamic, iterative process involving engagement among relevant stakeholders (including laboratory scientists, clinicians, and families), was adopted to provide a systematic structure to assess practices, interventions, and health outcomes across four domains. The four domains include knowledge of the condition, screening and diagnostic testing for SMA, SMA clinical care and supporting families as a central focus, and impact of SMA screening on the NBS programme as a whole.13

We focused on working collaboratively to identify barriers to implementation across the NBS pathway. Strategies to overcome these barriers were developed by auditing practices and obtaining feedback from stakeholders to enhance health care delivery. Iterative steps for dissemination of findings and practice improvements were shared with stakeholders in real time. We continued to devise and plan next steps for future practice, strategies to determine and evaluate meaningful health outcomes, and to develop pathways to ensure sustained knowledge use.

A centralized statewide paediatric neuromuscular and molecular genetic laboratory service is provided within Sydney Children’s Hospital Network, enabling surveillance for clinically detected cases of SMA. Infants detected by the pilot programme from 1st August 2018 to 31st January 2021 were referred to this service where demographic and clinical characteristics were collated. Clinical assessments were augmented with neurophysiological studies. The maximum amplitude of compound muscle action potentials (CMAPs) of the peroneal nerve (tibialis anterior) or ulnar nerve (abductor digiti minimi) was recorded at diagnosis, with a minimum of three G1 electrode positionings to ensure measurement of maximum amplitude. Longitudinal assessments were undertaken in a subset of infants alongside initiation of disease-modifying therapy.

Ethics approval

Ethics approval was gained from the Sydney Children’s Hospital Network Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC LNR/18/SCHN/307). Written informed consent was obtained from participating families.

Data analysis

Descriptive statistics were used to analyse data and expressed as a number (percentage) and median (range, standard deviation). Throughout statistical analysis, normal quantile–quantile plots of residuals and Shapiro–Wilk tests demonstrated no gross deviations from the normal distribution. For initial CMAP measurements from tibialis anterior, the differences in means between infants with SMA with two and three SMN2 copies were tested with Student’s t-tests. A paired Student’s t-test was used to compare longitudinal CMAPs from abductor digiti minimi within the first 5 weeks of therapy. Implementational challenges and learnings arising from them were captured prospectively from weekly neuromuscular multidisciplinary team meetings, real-time feedback from families, and ad hoc laboratory discussions. Two reviewers (MF and AD) examined the meeting content, written communications, and interpersonal exchanges applying deductive content analysis to structure shared experiences, learnings, local challenges, and exchange of knowledge using the Australian National Policy Framework for NBS (Table S1, online supporting information).14

RESULTS Participants’ characteristics

During the study interval, 252 081 newborn infants were included in the NBS programme. Twenty-two newborn infants were identified as screen positive for SMA. Diagnostic testing confirmed that 21 of the 22 screen-positive infants had homozygous deletions in exon 7 of SMN1. The atypical screen-positive result necessitated an individualized genetic and clinical approach (Appendix S1, online supporting information). Among the 21 infants with confirmed SMA, 12 had two SMN2 copies, eight had three copies, and one had four copies (Table S2, online supporting information). The median time between birth and a screen-positive result for these cases was 3 days (range 2–15) and the median time between birth and diagnostic confirmation was 15 days (range 10–23d). The median time to the start of therapeutic intervention was 25 days (range 15–39d). A further two infants with SMA were diagnosed clinically. For one of these, routine tandem mass spectrometry was completed on the NBS sample; however, SMN1 was not analysed owing to system errors that occurred during establishment of the pilot and before integration into laboratory computerized management systems. The laboratory did not receive an NBS sample for the other case. These were not related to the ability of the screening test to identify neonates correctly. Both presented clinically at 4 months of age.

Implementation knowledge and actions

Our experiences, learnings, and challenges were classified into (1) knowledge of the condition, (2) screening and diagnostic testing for SMA, (3) SMA clinical care and supporting families as a central focus, and (4) the impact of screening for SMA on the NBS programme (Table 1).

Table 1. Challenges, learnings, and strategies used during the newborn bloodspot screening (NBS) pilot programme for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) Learning and challenges Implementation action Process for sustainability in health practice and policy The condition Clinical and neurophysiology assessments established that newborn infants with a genotype of 0 SMN1 or two SMN2 may have rapid disease progression and early clinical onset

Local NBS pathways reviewed to avoid delays (see below diagnosis and clinical care)

Provision of information to families to identify symptoms of SMA while treatment plan being formulated

Pilot data informed application to add SMA to newborn bloodspot panel for national translation

New knowledge corroborates NBS is the best tool for the early identification and treatment of SMA

Development of national clinical guideline and pathway for routine care

Dissemination and training of HCPs

Screening and diagnostic genetic testing

Introduction of new assay to NBS was coupled with quality improvement activities

Absence of established diagnostic pathway for rapid SMN2 testing

Absence of established diagnostic pathway for false-positives

Ensuring diagnostic testing is completed as soon as possible after referral to clinicians

Clinical and laboratory processes mapped end to end

Incident monitoring, root cause analysis of the two individuals presenting with clinical symptoms identified underlying systematic weaknesses and random events, for which corrective actions and service improvements were identified. For example, DNA assays were integrated with a tandem mass spectrometry computerized tracking system within the NBS laboratory

Sharing of molecular pathology and genetics expertise to investigate SMN locus in unusual cases

Establish local SMN2 copy number testing to expediate diagnostic pathways

Increase flexibility and commitment from clinical and laboratory staff to deal with single urgent cases at short notice and change work patterns:

clinical context and impact presented to laboratory; triage of SMN1 diagnostic testing by NBS SMN2 copy number: laboratory overtime shifts to initiate and run testing for two SMN2 copies, urgent in-hours testing for three or more SMN2 copies

Strong links between clinical and laboratory team with electronic and verbal communication for urgent testing and tracking progress

Standard operative procedure established

National Association of Testing Authorities Australia accreditation for SMN2 diagnostic reporting using QX200 Auto DG digital droplet PCR system within NBS laboratory. Consequently, diagnostic confirmation was contingent on corroboration of SMN1 deletion in a different blood sample using assays with different SMN1 primers

Dissemination of diagnostic test protocol, including processes for SMN1 and SMN2 assessment and management of false-positives

NBS scientists familiar with tandem mass spectrometry and molecular genetic assays were trained to use the SMA and immunodeficiency assays within the NBS programme

Maintain strong partnerships across clinical and laboratory health services to deliver high quality NBS care

SMA clinical care and supporting families as a central focus

NBS identified families in remote areas, culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds, infants born preterm, infants with serious concurrent illnesses

Clinical uncertainty of more than three SMN2 copies and management

Limited availability of presymptomatic disease-modifying therapy for three or more SMN2 copies

Clinical team aware of individual circumstances to provide family-centred care, including psychosocial support

Clinical care included within current multidisciplinary neuromuscular service

Increased flexibility of team to deal with urgent cases at short notice and change work patterns

Clinical trials and compassionate access programmes supported access to disease-modifying therapies

Collaboration with policymakers to facilitate access to therapies

Dedicated team, communication strategy, and standard operating procedure to coordinate urgent and personalized clinic appointment

The programme enables equity of diagnosis and access to health care

Provision of family-centred care

Regulatory approval and reimbursement increased access to disease-modifying therapies

Development of national clinical guidelines and pathway for routine care

Impact on the programme as a whole

SMA NBS achieved within theprogramme’s current consent and screening pathway

No potential negative impacts upon other elements of the programme identified

Costs, equipment, and training ascertained

Cost-effectiveness of screening not known

Use of existing information systems to collect and maintain data for monitoring, evaluation, and review

Pilot budget included reagents, equipment, personnel, and training

Ongoing national funding for reagents, personnel, and equipment

Evidence for cost-effectiveness ongoing

HCP, health care professional; PCR, polymerase chain reaction. Knowledge of the condition

The incidence of SMA for those participating in the routine NBS programme was 1 in 11 458 (total 252 081, SMA 22, ascertained through NBS and subsequent clinical detection in this cohort). Among the 21 screen-positive infants with homozygous SMN1 exon 7 deletions, six showed clinical signs and symptoms of SMA disease onset (symptomatic) within the first 4 weeks of life. There were significant differences in CMAPs at the time of diagnosis, between infants with different SMA genotypes (two SMN2 copies, mean tibialis anterior 2.5±1.2mV, range 0.2–4.4; three SMN2 copies, mean tibialis anterior 4.3±1.5mV, range 3.2–7.2; p=0.02, Fig. 1a). Longitudinal assessments of ulnar CMAPs in three presymptomatic infants with two SMN2 copies, concomitant with initiation of treatment over 7 to 14 days, demonstrated rapid and substantial reductions in amplitude (mean baseline 2.9±1.0mV, mean follow-up 1.2±1.2mV; p=0.07), associated with symptom onset in one neonate (Fig. 1b). Our assessments of infants with SMA identified that the latent period may be short-lived, emphasizing that NBS is necessary for early diagnosis, before or during latent motor neuron degeneration.

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(a) Amplitudes of compound muscle action potentials (CMAPs) in newborn infants with two and three SMN2 copy numbers. Dots, individual values; horizontal lines, mean values for the group. (b) Longitudinal ulnar nerve CMAPs in presymptomatic newborn infants predicted to have severe SMA (two SMN2 copies). Ulnar CMAPs precipitously decreased in the second week and third week of life during initiation of disease-modifying therapy, heralding symptom onset.

Screening and diagnostic testing for SMA

NBS covered more than 99.9% of all newborn infants in New South Wales. The NBS pilot protocol on all tested dried bloodspot cards had a sensitivity of 100%, specificity greater than 99.9%, false-positive rate less than 0.001%, and positive predictive value of 95.5% (Table S3, online supporting information).

Rapid follow-up quantification of SMN2 copy number in all cases detected by NBS with homozygous SMN1 exon 7 deletions is required for planning treatment, determining clinical subtypes, and follow-up arrangements. A standard pathway for rapid diagnostic SMN2 testing was not present before NBS, with accreditation for diagnostic testing held by one laboratory nationally. The median time to completing diagnostic workup (including SMN2 copy number diagnostic results) was adversely influenced by interstate routine shipments occurring from Monday to Thursday before midday, which reduced operations during the COVID-19 pandemic. Therefore, to enable efficiencies and additional testing capacity, the NBS laboratory sought and obtained National Association of Testing Authorities Australia accreditation for SMN2 testing with digital droplet polymerase chain reaction on dried bloodspots. Dissemination of clinical findings led to increased flexibility and commitment from clinical and laboratory staff to deal with single urgent cases at short notice and change work patterns. The action was to triage SMN1 diagnostic testing by SMN2 copy number, such that laboratory overtime shifts initiated and ran testing for two SMN2 copies and urgent in-hours testing for three or more SMN2 copies.

SMA clinical care and supporting families as a central focus

The families of infants with SMA identified by NBS came from a broad range of sociodemographic backgrounds including culturally and linguistically diverse communities and regional areas. Some newborn infants were born preterm or had serious concurrent illnesses. A recognized barrier was tailoring information to fit a variety of needs among families. Further implementation challenges included management of urgent referrals and diagnostic evaluations for infants with an initial positive screen to avoid delays, with a focus on family-centred care.

Strong partnerships were created between NBS staff and neuromuscular specialists, successfully facilitated by integration of the NBS SMA pilot programme into established NBS pathways and neuromuscular models of care (Fig. 2). Before contacting families, close liaison between NBS services, local health care professionals (HCPs), and neuromuscular specialists identified the most appropriate clinical setting for an expeditious consultation for each family. Options included immediate referral to the neuromuscular team or, for those with difficulties travelling long distances, with the local paediatrician and specialist telehealth support. Increased flexibility of the team to deal with urgent and sometimes multiple cases at short notice and change work patterns ensured timely follow-up despite logistical challenges, significant time commitments, unpredictability, and changes to health practices during the COVID-19 pandemic.

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(a) Integration of the newborn bloodspot screening (NBS) spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) pilot programme into established NBS pathways. Assessment of SMN2 copy number was determined on specimens of dried bloodspots with no functional copies of SMN1 using digital droplet polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Diagnostic testing for National Association of Testing Authority-accredited confirmation of genetic status involved corroboration of SMN1 deletion results from whole blood samples (using a P060-B2 SMA Multiplex Ligation Dependant Probe Amplification kit MRC-Holland) by the NSW Health Pathology laboratory. SMN2 copy number was diagnostically confirmed by quantitative PCR by the Victorian Clinical Genetics Service. After positive screening from dried bloodspots and diagnostic confirmation, families were provided detailed information about SMA to facilitate discussion of management options. (b) Sequence of SMN1 exon 7 (capitalized) with flanking intronic regions showing location of probe/primers for relevant molecular genetic testing. The location of the single nucleotide variant (SMNc.842G>C) resulting in the NBS false-positive is highlighted. The critical difference between SMN1 and SMN2 is C>T at nucleotide position 840 which alters splicing. The NBS primary assay used a PerkinElmer Eonis DNA extraction kit 3240-0010 and an Eonis SCID-SMA kit 3234-0010 for quantitative real-time PCR. MLPA, multiplex-ligation dependent probe amplification. SOP, standard operating procedures.

The paediatric neuromuscular model of care included capability in clinical genetics to lead the investigation of unusual results, provide genetic counselling, and facilitate family cascade testing, supported by dedicated psychosocial input for families at a time of significant psychosocial stress. Our clinical therapeutic pathway and counselling was necessarily reliant on SMN2 copy number in mostly presymptomatic infants, which introduced uncertainties in conversations with parents about clinical severity and long-term outcomes.

Continuing care included nutritional, respiratory, and rehabilitative care, across a tertiary multidisciplinary team alongside collaboration and communication with community health care providers. Parents often sought guidance and reassurance from the neuromuscular team about parenting skills and common paediatric issues. The neuromuscular team provided clinical and emotional support and reassurance, alongside fostering engagement with relevant community early childhood HCPs.

Rapid developments in SMA treatment evolved during the pilot study, with overseas regulatory approval of gene therapy (onasemnogene abeparvovec) and risdiplam. Access to presymptomatic disease-modifying therapies in Australia were through clinical trials or compassionate/managed access programmes before reimbursement of nusinersen in December 2020 (no more than SMN2 copies). It continues to be important that access to approved and reimbursed therapy is proficient in condensing timelines and that logistical complexities in initiating disease-modifying therapy for eligible patients are optimized. Ongoing collaboration between clinicians, families, industry, and policymakers continues to progress approval and reimbursement of SMA disease-modifying therapies, aligned with evidence of efficacy, safety, and economic impact. We identified the need to develop a decision support analysis and national clinical guideline for SMA treatment and clinical care.

Impact of SMA screening on the NBS programme as a whole

Our pilot programme used current NBS consent and pathways and confirmed that these were suitable for the addition of SMA. The pilot programme did not affect the performance of the wider NBS programme, in particular the programme’s high participation rate sustained at more than 99.9%. The additional costs of screening were incorporated in the pilot programme budget, including purchase of reagents, new equipment, personnel, and training.

Across the four key domains, learnings were disseminated in real time with presentations at local, national, and international scientific meetings and webinars, with stakeholder meetings (between clinicians, advocacy organizations, and policymakers) providing an opportunity for feedback and further refinement of our processes. Our outcomes informed the application to the National Standing Committee of Screening to add SMA to the newborn bloodspot panel, together with a detailed economic evaluation.15 In May 2021 the Commonwealth Department of Health made a positive recommendation for the addition of SMA to routine NBS programmes by all Australian states.

DISCUSSION

Therapeutic advances have rapidly transformed the landscape for SMA, prompting the development and initiation of NBS programmes for SMA globally.2 This study used an effectiveness-implementation strategy to examine the clinical effectiveness of the NBS SMA programme and to collect data on its feasibility within the Australian health care system, focusing on the provision of consistent, equitable, and family-centred care. Our study showed that the incidence of SMA was similar to panethnic estimates ascertained from retrospective studies of symptomatic individuals. Concerns about the potential of NBS programmes to overdiagnose, particularly in identifying individuals who would otherwise remain asymptomatic, seem to be unfounded.16 The incidence of newborn infants with more than three copies of SMN2 was low in our population. The incidence of four SMN2 copies is variable among NBS programmes.17, 18 Previous studies have identified differences in methodology accounting for discrepancies in individuals with higher copy numbers of SMN2; therefore, establishing standardization for SMN2 copy number quantification is important for best practice. The population coverage for our study was high, in keeping with historically high rates of NBS uptake in Australia.17, 19

This study provided real-time feedback to enhance NBS and clinical infrastructures that allow expedited access to screening, diagnostic, and therapeutic services. Critical insights into the brief latent period for those predicted to develop SMA type 1 were elucidated, highlighting the importance of urgent diagnostic testing and initiation of therapy, especially as irreversible motor neuron degeneration limits clinical benefit. CMAPs proved to be a useful adjunct to clinical characterization in identifying disease onset.

This study demonstrated that an NBS programme for SMA within the Australian health care system overcomes barriers of sociodemographic inequity. By using an implementation-effectiveness model, we devised a pathway that integrated a biopsychosocial approach into current practice. This methodology provided an opportunity to transform health outcomes by delivering treatments targeted to the needs of individual patients on the basis of genetic, phenotypic, and psychosocial characteristics.20, 21

Several research priorities were recognized on the basis of challenges in clinical care. The need for initiatives to identify novel predictive and prognostic biomarkers to establish the impact of treatments alongside NBS on mortality and morbidity in SMA was identified. We used current information and evidence about SMN2 copy number to predict phenotype and treatment, and acknowledged ambiguity for individual correlation in shared decision-making.22 Additional biomarkers may be particularly valuable for individuals with more than three SMN2 copies since these cohorts have the potential for considerable phenotypic heterogeneity. The feasibility and clinical utility of emerging biomarkers such as plasma neurofilament or rare genetic variants (e.g. c.859G>C and c.835-44A>G) within an NBS programme thus requires investigation. Forthcoming clinical and economic evidence detailing the advantages of NBS coupled with treatment will be powerful engagement tools for routine adoption and sustainability. In addition, evidence-based decision support guidelines and provision of contemporary written and electronic information for families,23 appropriate to national regulatory and reimbursement processes, are needed within a rapidly changing therapeutic landscape.

A multidisciplinary team, strong partnerships among stakeholders, continual robust lines of communication, and information exchange activities across clinical and laboratory staff were key to implementation. An important component of the Australian National Policy Framework for NBS is programme governance and organization, to ensure safety and quality.24 Our study emphasized the necessity of having robust laboratory and clinical processes to understand atypical screening results and clinical presentations of SMA.

NBS maximized opportunities for early intervention through timely and equitable SMA diagnosis, mitigating existing health inequities due to financial, geographical, cultural, and linguistic barriers to health care. Overcoming barriers of inequity is particularly important in the sphere of neurodisability where psychosocial disadvantage in addition to chronic disease culminates in reduced access to appropriate clinical care and social services.25 The success of SMA therapeutic intervention was reliant on best practice, facilitated by integration of NBS into contemporary multidisciplinary neuromuscular services to provide prompt and family-centred care. For children and families with SMA this included capability in genetics, advanced therapeutics, and nutritional, respiratory, rehabilitative, and psychosocial care.26, 27

Our findings have health policy implications. The pilot NBS programme for SMA has created a standardized path to facilitate early diagnosis, targeted management of SMA, and translation for national routine adoption into clinical practice and health policy. This would benefit around 30 Australian families each year. An upcoming implementation challenge, intensified by the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, may be in obtaining prompt state-based funding to maintain equity and sustainability.

Ongoing assessment of this programme will be necessary as further evidence, drug reimbursement guidelines, and clinical consensus statements emerge. Ultimately, strategic planning as well as multinational collaborations will continue to be critical to sustainable NBS across diverse health systems. Future research should also look at the impact of NBS SMA on long-term prognosis for children diagnosed through NBS. The results from this study can be used as a blueprint for NBS programmes globally, as they work to expand the number of disorders screened, alongside providing a personalized model of care for identified individuals.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Members of the NSW SMA NBS Study Group are as follows: Anja Ravine, David Mowat, Hugo Sampaio, Ian E Alexander, Jacqui Russell, Kristi J Jones, and Zena Junek. No funding was received to perform this study. MAF received grant support from the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia: Investigator grant (APP1194940). DK acknowledges funding from the RTP Scholarship, University of New South Wales and The Freedman Family Foundation Scholarship. Validation of the multiplex quantitative polymerase chain reaction and digital droplet polymerase chain reaction laboratory methods was supported by a Biogen Investigator Initiated Study. We acknowledge Edwin Kirk and Melanie Smith for their respective roles in providing diagnostic laboratory testing at NSW Health Pathology and the Victorian Clinical Genetics Service. We also acknowledge Luminesce Alliance – Innovation for Children’s Health for its contribution and support. Luminesce Alliance – Innovation for Children’s Health is a not-for-profit cooperative joint venture between the Sydney Children’s Hospitals Network, the Children’s Medical Research Institute, and the Children’s Cancer Institute. It has been established with the support of the New South Wales Government to coordinate and integrate paediatric research. Luminesce Alliance is also affiliated with the University of Sydney and the University of New South Wales Sydney. MAF has received compensation as a member of the scientific advisory boards for Biogen, Roche, and Novartis. KJ has received compensation as a member of the scientific advisory board for Biogen. These funding bodies had no role in the design of the study, data collection, data analysis, manuscript design, preparation of the manuscript, or decision to publish. The authors have stated that they had no interests that might be perceived as posing a conflict or bias.

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