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Prenatal reflex DNA screening for trisomies 21, 18, and 13
Institution:1. Wolfson Institute of Preventive Medicine, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK;;2. Maternity Department, Barts Health NHS Trust (Royal London Hospital, Newham General Hospital and/Whipps Cross Hospitals), London, UK;;3. Kingston Hospital Maternity service, London, UK;;4. Department of Women’s and Children’s Health, The University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
Abstract:PurposeThe purpose of the study was to determine the screening performance of prenatal reflex DNA screening for trisomies 21 (T21), 18 (T18), and 13 (T13) as part of a routine service at five hospitals.MethodsWomen who accepted screening had a first-trimester combined test (pregnancy-associated plasma protein A, free β-human chorionic gonadotropin, nuchal translucency interpreted with maternal age). Those with a risk of having an affected pregnancy ≥1 in 800 were reflexed to a DNA sequencing test using stored plasma from the original blood sample, thereby avoiding the need to recall them.ResultsOf 22,812 women screened (including 106 with affected pregnancies), 2,480 (10.9%) were reflexed to DNA testing; 101/106 were detected (69/73 T21, 24/25 T18, and 8/8 T13), a 95% detection rate (95% confidence interval 89–98%) with four false positives (0.02%, 95% confidence interval 0.00–0.05%). The odds of being affected given a positive result were 25:1. Of the 105 screen-positive pregnancies, 91 (87%) had an invasive diagnostic test. Reflex DNA screening avoided up to 530 invasive diagnostic tests compared with using the combined test.ConclusionReflex DNA screening was successfully implemented in routine care, achieving a high detection rate, low false-positive rate, and, consequently, greater safety with fewer invasive diagnostic tests than other methods of screening.
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