Maternal plasma DNA testing: experience of women counseled at a prenatal diagnosis center.

Genet Test Mol Biomarkers

1 Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Women & Infants Hospital, The Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island.

Published: October 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to assess the early use of circulating cell-free DNA testing in a prenatal diagnosis center for women at high risk of aneuploidy in a statewide population.
  • The review involved 299 women, revealing that factors like maternal age and insurance coverage influenced the decision to undergo testing, with a notable increase in test uptake and patient awareness.
  • Most women opted for the test to avoid invasive procedures, but many declined due to cost concerns and an belief that results wouldn’t change their decisions.

Article Abstract

Aims: To evaluate the early introduction of circulating cell-free (ccf) DNA testing in a prenatal diagnosis center serving a statewide population.

Results: A retrospective chart review of patients at high aneuploidy risk counseled during the two 10-week periods that documents indication, risk, maternal age, insurance coverage, decisions, and reasoning behind that decision. Among the 299 included women, indication was advanced maternal age (17% with and 56% without an additional indication), positive serum screen (15%), and abnormal ultrasound (12%). Uptake increased from 10% to 17%, as did patient awareness of the test (4% to 14%). Women with lower copayments were more likely to complete testing (23% vs. 5%, p<0.001). Most women completing testing (75%) wanted to avoid an invasive procedure, while those declining cited testing would not change anything (47%), preferred diagnostic testing (16%), negative follow-up testing (20%), and cost/insurance issues (9%). One of 42 tests was positive (trisomy 21).

Conclusions: Individual patient follow-up allows us to document ccfDNA-related patient decision-making. Nearly half of the women did not want further testing and one in seven preferred immediate diagnostic testing. Patient costs were a barrier to testing that, if avoided, could increase test uptake by 50% or more.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/gtmb.2014.0125DOI Listing

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