Gita Mehta
University of Dundee
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Gita Mehta.
Journal of Cystic Fibrosis | 2009
Carlo Castellani; K.W. Southern; K.G. Brownlee; Jeannette Dankert Roelse; Alistair Duff; Michael H. Farrell; Anil Mehta; Anne Munck; R. J. Pollitt; Isabelle Sermet-Gaudelus; Bridget Wilcken; Manfred Ballmann; Carlo Corbetta; Isabelle de Monestrol; Philip M. Farrell; M. Feilcke; Claude Férec; Silvia Gartner; Kevin J. Gaskin; Jutta Hammermann; Nataliya Kashirskaya; Gerard Loeber; Milan Macek; Gita Mehta; Andreas Reiman; Paolo Rizzotti; Alec Sammon; Dorota Sands; Alan Smyth; Olaf Sommerburg
There is wide agreement on the benefits of NBS for CF in terms of lowered disease severity, decreased burden of care, and reduced costs. Risks are mainly associated with disclosure of carrier status and diagnostic uncertainty. When starting a NBS programme for CF it is important to take precautions in order to minimise avoidable risks and maximise benefits. In Europe more than 25 screening programmes have been developed, with quite marked variation in protocol design. However, given the wide geographic, ethnic, and economic variations, complete harmonisation of protocols is not appropriate. There is little evidence to support the use of IRT alone as a second tier, without involving DNA mutation analysis. However, if IRT/DNA testing does not lead to the desired specificity/sensitivity ratio in a population, a screening programme based on IRT/IRT may be used. Sweat chloride concentration remains the gold standard for discriminating between NBS false and true positives, but age-related changes in sweat chloride should be taken into account. CF phenotypes associated with less severe disease often have intermediate or normal sweat chloride concentrations. Programmes should include arrangements for counselling and management of infants where the diagnosis is not clear-cut. All newborns identified by NBS should be managed according to internationally accepted guidelines. CF centre care and the availability of necessary medication are essential prerequisites before the introduction of NBS programmes. Clear explanation to families of the process of screening and of implications of normal and abnormal results is central to the success of CF NBS programmes. Effective communication is especially important when parents are told that their child is affected or is a carrier. When establishing a NBS programme for CF, attention should be given to ensuring timely and appropriate processing of results, to minimise potential stress for families.
Pediatrics | 2007
Erika J. Sims; Allan Clark; Jonathan McCormick; Gita Mehta; Gary Connett; Anil Mehta
OBJECTIVE. Newborn screening for cystic fibrosis remains controversial because improved pulmonary function has not been established. Studies to date have not accounted for differences in treatments delivered to clinically diagnosed children and newborn-screened controls. Here, we compare outcomes and treatment of patients clinically diagnosed within the newborn-screening reporting window (early-clinically diagnosed), those presenting after this period (late-clinically diagnosed), and patients diagnosed by newborn screening. PATIENTS AND METHODS. In a cross-sectional analysis of cohorts retrospectively ascertained, patients who were homozygous ΔF508 with cystic fibrosis, attending specialist cystic fibrosis centers, and 1 to 10 years of age between 2000 and 2002 were identified from the United Kingdom Cystic Fibrosis Database and stratified into newborn-screened, early-clinically diagnosed, or late-clinically diagnosed cohorts. Two analyses were performed: (1) after restricting to the most recent year of data collection, early-clinically diagnosed and late-clinically diagnosed cohorts were matched to newborn-screened patients by patient age and year of data collection (133 patients per cohort were identified); and (2) for all years of data collection, annual sets of data for early-clinically diagnosed and late-clinically diagnosed patients were matched to newborn-screened patients by patient age and year of data collection (291 data sets per cohort were identified). Median height and weight z scores, proportion of patients with height and weight <10th percentile, prevalence of chronic Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection, Shwachman-Kulczyki morbidity scores, percent predicted forced expiratory volume in 1 second, and numbers of long-term therapies were compared. RESULTS. In both analyses, newborn screening was associated with higher height z score, higher Shwachman-Kulczyki score, lower likelihood of height <10th percentile, and fewer long-term therapies compared with late-clinically diagnosed patients. No other differences were found. CONCLUSIONS. Newborn screening was associated with improved growth, reduced morbidity, and reduced therapy, yet generated equivalent pulmonary outcome compared with late clinical diagnosis, suggesting that newborn screening may slow cystic fibrosis lung disease progression.
The Lancet | 2007
Erika J. Sims; Miranda Mugford; Allan Clark; David William Aitken; Jonathan McCormick; Gita Mehta; Anil Mehta
BACKGROUND Newborn screening for cystic fibrosis might not be introduced if implementation and running costs are perceived as prohibitive. Compared with clinical diagnosis, newborn screening is associated with clinical benefit and reduced treatment needs. We estimate the potential savings in treatment costs attributable to newborn screening. METHODS Using the UK Cystic Fibrosis Database, we used a prevalence strategy to undertake a cost of illness retrospective snapshot cohort study. We estimated yearly costs of long-term therapies and intravenous antibiotics for 184 patients who were diagnosed as a result of screening as newborn babies, and 950 patients who were clinically diagnosed aged 1-9 years in 2002. Costs of adding cystic fibrosis screening to an established newborn screening service in Scotland were adjusted to 2002 prices and applied to the UK as a whole. Costs were recalculated in US
European Journal of Human Genetics | 2002
Jonathan McCormick; M. W. Green; Gita Mehta; Frank Culross; Anil Mehta
. FINDINGS Cost of therapy for patients diagnosed by newborn screening was significantly lower than equivalent therapies for clinically diagnosed patients: mean (
Journal of Cystic Fibrosis | 2010
Gita Mehta; Milan Macek; Anil Mehta
7228 vs
BMC Medical Research Methodology | 2010
Stephen Turner; Jon Ayres; Tatiana V. Macfarlane; Anil Mehta; Gita Mehta; Colin N. A. Palmer; Steve Cunningham; Tim Adams; Krishnan Aniruddhan; Claire Bell; Donna Corrigan; Jason Cunningham; Andrew Duncan; Gerard Hunt; Richard Leece; Una MacFadyen; Jonathan McCormick; Sally McLeish; Andrew Mitra; Debbie Miller; Elizabeth Waxman; Alan Webb; Slawomir Wojcik; Somnath Mukhopadhyay; Donald F. Macgregor
12 008, 95% CI of difference -6736 to -2028, p<0.0001) and median (
Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases | 2010
Anil Mehta; Gita Mehta; Milan Macek
352 vs
Journal of Cystic Fibrosis | 2008
Anil Mehta; Gita Mehta; H.V. Olesen; Milan Macek
2442, -1916 to -180, p<0.0001). When we limited the clinically diagnosed group to only those diagnosable with a 31 cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator mutation assay and assumed similar disease progression in the clinically diagnosed group as in the newborn screening group, we showed that mean (
The Lancet | 2010
Jonathan McCormick; Gita Mehta; H.V. Olesen; Laura Viviani; Milan Macek; Anil Mehta
3,397,344) or median (
The Journal of Pediatrics | 2005
Erika J. Sims; Jonathan McCormick; Gita Mehta; Anil Mehta
947,032) drug cost savings could have offset the estimated cost of adding cystic fibrosis to a UK national newborn screening service (