AI Article Synopsis

  • This study compared the clinical validity of two non-invasive prenatal screening (NIPS) methods for detecting fetal trisomies and monosomy X in a large cohort of high-risk and baseline-risk pregnant women.
  • The two NIPS tests used advanced sequencing technologies, and involved analyzing samples from 1933 high-risk and 1660 baseline-risk women, with a reference standard based on invasive tests.
  • Results indicated that both methods showed similar high detection rates (99% for T21) and low false positive rates (<0.3%), with a z-score cutoff of 3.5 recommended to enhance test accuracy in high-risk pregnancies.

Article Abstract

We compared clinical validity of two non-invasive prenatal screening (NIPS) methods for fetal trisomies 13, 18, 21, and monosomy X. We recruited prospectively 2203 women at high risk of fetal aneuploidy and 1807 at baseline risk. Three-hundred and twenty-nine euploid samples were randomly removed. The remaining 1933 high risk and 1660 baseline-risk plasma aliquots were assigned randomly between four laboratories and tested with two index NIPS tests, blind to maternal variables and pregnancy outcomes. The two index tests used massively parallel shotgun sequencing (semiconductor-based and optical-based). The reference standard for all fetuses was invasive cytogenetic analysis or clinical examination at birth and postnatal follow-up. For each chromosome of interest, chromosomal ratios were calculated (number of reads for chromosome/total number of reads). Euploid samples' mean chromosomal ratio coefficients of variation were 0.48 (T21), 0.34 (T18), and 0.31 (T13). According to the reference standard, there were 155 cases of T21, 49 T18, 8 T13 and 22 45,X. Using a fetal fraction ≥4% to call results and a chromosomal ratio z-score of ≥3 to report a positive result, detection rates (DR), and false positive rates (FPR) were not statistically different between platforms: mean DR 99% (T21), 100%(T18, T13); 79%(45,X); FPR < 0.3% for T21, T18, T13, and <0.6% for 45,X. Both methods' negative predictive values in high-risk pregnancies were >99.8%, except for 45,X(>99.6%). Threshold analysis in high-risk pregnancies with different fetal fractions and z-score cut-offs suggested that a z-score cutoff to 3.5 for positive results improved test accuracy. Both sequencing platforms showed equivalent and excellent clinical validity.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6871532PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41431-019-0443-0DOI Listing

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