DNA Sequencing versus Standard Prenatal Aneuploidy Screening

被引:461
作者
Bianchi, Diana W. [1 ,2 ]
Parker, R. Lamar [3 ]
Wentworth, Jeffrey [4 ]
Madankumar, Rajeevi [5 ]
Saffer, Craig [6 ]
Das, Anita F. [7 ]
Craig, Joseph A. [9 ]
Chudova, Darya I. [8 ]
Devers, Patricia L. [8 ]
Jones, Keith W. [8 ]
Oliver, Kelly [8 ]
Rava, Richard P. [8 ]
Sehnert, Amy J. [8 ]
机构
[1] Tufts Med Ctr, Mother Infant Res Inst, Boston, MA 02111 USA
[2] Tufts Univ, Sch Med, Boston, MA 02111 USA
[3] Lyndhurst Clin Res, Winston Salem, NC USA
[4] Grp Women, Norfolk, VA USA
[5] North Shore LIJ Hlth Syst, Long Isl Jewish Med Ctr, New Hyde Pk, NY USA
[6] West Coast OB GYN, San Diego, CA USA
[7] InClin, San Mateo, CA USA
[8] Illumina, Redwood City, CA USA
[9] Colorado Permanente Med Grp, Denver, CO USA
关键词
CELL-FREE DNA; FREE FETAL DNA; MATERNAL BLOOD; TRISOMIES; 21; 1ST-TRIMESTER; TRISOMY-21; EXPERIENCE; POSITION; SOCIETY; LIMITS;
D O I
10.1056/NEJMoa1311037
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
BackgroundIn high-risk pregnant women, noninvasive prenatal testing with the use of massively parallel sequencing of maternal plasma cell-free DNA (cfDNA testing) accurately detects fetal autosomal aneuploidy. Its performance in low-risk women is unclear. MethodsAt 21 centers in the United States, we collected blood samples from women with singleton pregnancies who were undergoing standard aneuploidy screening (serum biochemical assays with or without nuchal translucency measurement). We performed massively parallel sequencing in a blinded fashion to determine the chromosome dosage for each sample. The primary end point was a comparison of the false positive rates of detection of fetal trisomies 21 and 18 with the use of standard screening and cfDNA testing. Birth outcomes or karyotypes were the reference standard. ResultsThe primary series included 1914 women (mean age, 29.6 years) with an eligible sample, a singleton fetus without aneuploidy, results from cfDNA testing, and a risk classification based on standard screening. For trisomies 21 and 18, the false positive rates with cfDNA testing were significantly lower than those with standard screening (0.3% vs. 3.6% for trisomy 21, P<0.001; and 0.2% vs. 0.6% for trisomy 18, P=0.03). The use of cfDNA testing detected all cases of aneuploidy (5 for trisomy 21, 2 for trisomy 18, and 1 for trisomy 13; negative predictive value, 100% [95% confidence interval, 99.8 to 100]). The positive predictive values for cfDNA testing versus standard screening were 45.5% versus 4.2% for trisomy 21 and 40.0% versus 8.3% for trisomy 18. ConclusionsIn a general obstetrical population, prenatal testing with the use of cfDNA had significantly lower false positive rates and higher positive predictive values for detection of trisomies 21 and 18 than standard screening. (Funded by Illumina; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01663350.) Sequencing of fetal DNA in maternal blood to detect trisomies had a significantly lower false positive rate than the standard method of biochemical assay and measurement of nuchal translucency in women at low risk for carrying an affected child. Noninvasive prenatal testing performed with the use of massively parallel sequencing of cell-free DNA (cfDNA testing) in maternal plasma came into use in clinical prenatal care in the United States in late 2011. This transition occurred after multiple clinical validation studies all showed high sensitivities, specificities, and negative predictive values for detection of the most common autosomal aneuploidies.(1)-(9) Plasma samples for the validation studies were either acquired retrospectively from populations with known karyotypes or collected prospectively from high-risk populations to ensure an adequate enrichment of aneuploid fetal samples for testing. The results of these studies were sufficiently robust to ...
引用
收藏
页码:799 / 808
页数:10
相关论文
共 26 条
  • [1] Noninvasive Prenatal Testing for Fetal Aneuploidy
    不详
    [J]. OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY, 2012, 120 (06) : 1532 - 1534
  • [2] Position statement from the Aneuploidy Screening Committee on behalf of the Board of the International Society for Prenatal Diagnosis
    Benn, Peter
    Borell, Antoni
    Chiu, Rossa
    Cuckle, Howard
    Dugoff, Lorraine
    Faas, Brigitte
    Gross, Susan
    Johnson, Joann
    Maymon, Ron
    Norton, Mary
    Odibo, Anthony
    Schielen, Peter
    Spencer, Kevin
    Huang, Tianhua
    Wright, Dave
    Yaron, Yuval
    [J]. PRENATAL DIAGNOSIS, 2013, 33 (07) : 622 - 629
  • [3] Genome-Wide Fetal Aneuploidy Detection by Maternal Plasma DNA Sequencing
    Bianchi, Diana W.
    Platt, Lawrence D.
    Goldberg, James D.
    Abuhamad, Alfred Z.
    Sehnert, Amy J.
    Rava, Richard P.
    [J]. OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY, 2012, 119 (05) : 890 - 901
  • [4] Non-invasive prenatal assessment of trisomy 21 by multiplexed maternal plasma DNA sequencing: large scale validity study
    Chiu, Rossa W. K.
    Akolekar, Ranjit
    Zheng, Yama W. L.
    Leung, Tak Y.
    Sun, Hao
    Chan, K. C. Allen
    Lun, Fiona M. F.
    Go, Attie T. J. I.
    Lau, Elizabeth T.
    To, William W. K.
    Leung, Wing C.
    Tang, Rebecca Y. K.
    Au-Yeung, Sidney K. C.
    Lam, Helena
    Kung, Yu Y.
    Zhang, Xiuqing
    van Vugt, John M. G.
    Minekawa, Ryoko
    Tang, Mary H. Y.
    Wang, Jun
    Oudejans, Cees B. M.
    Lau, Tze K.
    Nicolaides, Kypros H.
    Lo, Y. M. Dennis
    [J]. BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2011, 342 : 217
  • [5] Fetal aneuploidy screening by maternal plasma DNA sequencing: 'False positive' due to confined placental mosaicism
    Choi, H.
    Lau, T. K.
    Jiang, F. M.
    Chan, M. K.
    Zhang, H. Y.
    Lo, P. S. S.
    Chen, F.
    Zhang, L.
    Wang, W.
    [J]. PRENATAL DIAGNOSIS, 2013, 33 (02) : 198 - 200
  • [6] The use of confidence or fiducial limits illustrated in the case of the binomial.
    Clopper, CJ
    Pearson, ES
    [J]. BIOMETRIKA, 1934, 26 : 404 - 413
  • [7] Clinical application of massively parallel sequencing-based prenatal noninvasive fetal trisomy test for trisomies 21 and 18 in 11 105 pregnancies with mixed risk factors
    Dan, Shan
    Wang, Wei
    Ren, Jinghui
    Li, Yali
    Hu, Hua
    Xu, Zhengfeng
    Lau, Tze Kin
    Xie, Jianhong
    Zhao, Weihua
    Huang, Hefeng
    Xie, Jiansheng
    Sun, Luming
    Zhang, Xiaohong
    Wang, Weipeng
    Liao, Shixiu
    Qiang, Rong
    Cao, Jiangxia
    Zhang, Qiufang
    Zhou, Yulin
    Zhu, Haiyan
    Zhong, Mei
    Guo, Yi
    Lin, Linhua
    Gao, Zhiying
    Yao, Hong
    Zhang, Hongyun
    Zhao, Lijian
    Jiang, Fuman
    Chen, Fang
    Jiang, Hui
    Li, Songgang
    Li, Yingrui
    Wang, Jun
    Wang, Jian
    Duan, Tao
    Su, Yue
    Zhang, Xiuqing
    [J]. PRENATAL DIAGNOSIS, 2012, 32 (13) : 1225 - 1232
  • [8] Noninvasive Prenatal Testing/Noninvasive Prenatal Diagnosis: the Position of the National Society of Genetic Counselors
    Devers, Patricia L.
    Cronister, Amy
    Ormond, Kelly E.
    Facio, Flavia
    Brasington, Campbell K.
    Flodman, Pamela
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GENETIC COUNSELING, 2013, 22 (03) : 291 - 295
  • [9] Noninvasive detection of fetal trisomy 21 by sequencing of DNA in maternal blood: a study in a clinical setting
    Ehrich, Mathias
    Deciu, Cosmin
    Zwiefelhofer, Tricia
    Tynan, John A.
    Cagasan, Lesley
    Tim, Roger
    Lu, Vivian
    McCullough, Ron
    McCarthy, Erin
    Nygren, Anders O. H.
    Dean, Jarrod
    Tang, Lin
    Hutchison, Don
    Lu, Tim
    Wang, Huiquan
    Angkachatchai, Vach
    Oeth, Paul
    Cantor, Charles R.
    Bombard, Allan
    van den Boom, Dirk
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY, 2011, 204 (03)
  • [10] Clinical experience of noninvasive prenatal testing with cell-free DNA for fetal trisomies 21, 18, and 13, in a general screening population
    Fairbrother, Genevieve
    Johnson, Shayla
    Musci, Thomas J.
    Song, Ken
    [J]. PRENATAL DIAGNOSIS, 2013, 33 (06) : 580 - 583