| 05 Juin 2013
Current  screening for Down's syndrome, or trisomy 21, and other trisomy  conditions includes a combined test done between the 11th and 13th  weeks of pregnancy, which involves an ultrasound screen and a hormonal  analysis of the pregnant woman’s blood. Only chorionic villus sampling  and  amniocentesis can definitely detect or rule out fetal genetic  abnormalities, but these are invasive to the pregnancy and carry a risk  of miscarriage.  Several  studies have shown that non-invasive prenatal diagnosis for trisomy  syndromes using fetal cell free (cf) DNA from a pregnant woman’s  blood is highly sensitive and specific, making it a potentially reliable  alternative that can be done earlier in pregnancy.  An Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology study by Kypros Nicolaides, MD, of the Harris Birthright Research  Centre for Fetal Medicine  at King’s College London in England, and his colleagues is the first to  prospectively demonstrate the feasibility of routine screening for  trisomies 21, 18,  and 13 by cfDNA testing. Testing done in 1005 pregnancies at 10 weeks  had a lower false positive rate and higher sensitivity for fetal trisomy  than the  combined test done at 12 weeks. Both cfDNA and combined testing detected  all trisomies, but the estimated false-positive rates were 0.1% and  3.4%,  respectively.  “This  study has shown that the main advantage of cfDNA testing, compared with  the combined test, is the substantial reduction in false  positive rate. Another major advantage of cfDNA testing is the reporting  of results as very high or very low risk, which makes it easier for  parents to  decide in favor of or against invasive testing,” the authors wrote.  A second Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology study by the group, which included pregnancies undergoing screening at  three UK  hospitals between March 2006 and May 2012, found that effective  first-trimester screening for Down’s syndrome could be achieved by cfDNA  testing contingent  on the results of the combined test done at 11 to 13 weeks. The strategy  detected 98% of cases, and invasive testing was needed for confirmation  in less than  0.5% of cases.  “Screening  for trisomy 21 by cfDNA testing contingent on the results of an  expanded combined test would retain the advantages of the current  method of screening, but with a simultaneous major increase in detection  rate and decrease in the rate of invasive testing,” the authors  concluded.
New  research has found that rutine screening using a non-invasive test that  analyzes fetal DNA in a pregnant woman’s blood can accurately  detect Down’s syndrome and other genetic fetal abnormalities in the  first trimester. Published early online in Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology,  the results suggest that the test is superior to currently available  screening strategies and could reshape standards in prenatal testing.