DNA sequencing of maternal plasma reliably identifies trisomy 18 and trisomy 13 as well as Down syndrome: an international collaborative study

Glenn E. Palomaki(Brown University), Cosmin Deciu(Sequenom (United States)), Edward M. Kloza(Brown University), Geralyn Lambert‐Messerlian(Brown University), James E. Haddow(Brown University), Louis M. Neveux(Brown University), Mathias Ehrich(Sequenom (United States)), Dirk van den Boom(Sequenom (United States)), Allan T. Bombard(Sequenom (United States)), Wayne W. Grody(University of California, Los Angeles), Stanley F. Nelson(University of California, Los Angeles), Jacob A. Canick(Brown University)
Genetics in Medicine
January 26, 2012
Cited by 520Open Access
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Abstract

PURPOSE: To determine whether maternal plasma cell-free DNA sequencing can effectively identify trisomy 18 and 13. METHODS: Sixty-two pregnancies with trisomy 18 and 12 with trisomy 13 were selected from a cohort of 4,664 pregnancies along with matched euploid controls (including 212 additional Down syndrome and matched controls already reported), and their samples tested using a laboratory-developed, next-generation sequencing test. Interpretation of the results for chromosome 18 and 13 included adjustment for CG content bias. RESULTS: Among the 99.1% of samples interpreted (1,971/1,988), observed trisomy 18 and 13 detection rates were 100% (59/59) and 91.7% (11/12) at false-positive rates of 0.28% and 0.97%, respectively. Among the 17 samples without an interpretation, three were trisomy 18. If z-score cutoffs for trisomy 18 and 13 were raised slightly, the overall false-positive rates for the three aneuploidies could be as low as 0.1% (2/1,688) at an overall detection rate of 98.9% (280/283) for common aneuploidies. An independent academic laboratory confirmed performance in a subset. CONCLUSION: Among high-risk pregnancies, sequencing circulating cell-free DNA detects nearly all cases of Down syndrome, trisomy 18, and trisomy 13, at a low false-positive rate. This can potentially reduce invasive diagnostic procedures and related fetal losses by 95%. Evidence supports clinical testing for these aneuploidies.


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