Chromosomal Microarray versus Karyotyping for Prenatal Diagnosis

Ronald J. Wapner(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Christa Lese Martin(Emory University), Brynn Levy, Blake C. Ballif(Signature Research (United States)), Christine M. Eng(Baylor College of Medicine), Julia Zachary(George Washington University), Melissa Savage, Lawrence D. Platt(American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine), Daniel H. Saltzman(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), William A. Grobman(Northwestern University), Susan Klugman(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Thomas Scholl(Sequenom (United States)), Joe Leigh Simpson(Florida International University), Kimberly McCall(Santa Fe Institute), Vimla S. Aggarwal, Brian Bunke(Emory University), Odelia Nahum, Ankita Patel(Baylor College of Medicine), Allen N. Lamb(Signature Research (United States)), Elizabeth Thom(George Washington University), Arthur L. Beaudet(Baylor College of Medicine), David H. Ledbetter(Emory University), Lisa G. Shaffer(Signature Research (United States)), Laird Jackson(Drexel University)
New England Journal of Medicine
December 5, 2012
Cited by 1,418Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Chromosomal microarray analysis has emerged as a primary diagnostic tool for the evaluation of developmental delay and structural malformations in children. We aimed to evaluate the accuracy, efficacy, and incremental yield of chromosomal microarray analysis as compared with karyotyping for routine prenatal diagnosis. METHODS: Samples from women undergoing prenatal diagnosis at 29 centers were sent to a central karyotyping laboratory. Each sample was split in two; standard karyotyping was performed on one portion and the other was sent to one of four laboratories for chromosomal microarray. RESULTS: We enrolled a total of 4406 women. Indications for prenatal diagnosis were advanced maternal age (46.6%), abnormal result on Down's syndrome screening (18.8%), structural anomalies on ultrasonography (25.2%), and other indications (9.4%). In 4340 (98.8%) of the fetal samples, microarray analysis was successful; 87.9% of samples could be used without tissue culture. Microarray analysis of the 4282 nonmosaic samples identified all the aneuploidies and unbalanced rearrangements identified on karyotyping but did not identify balanced translocations and fetal triploidy. In samples with a normal karyotype, microarray analysis revealed clinically relevant deletions or duplications in 6.0% with a structural anomaly and in 1.7% of those whose indications were advanced maternal age or positive screening results. CONCLUSIONS: In the context of prenatal diagnostic testing, chromosomal microarray analysis identified additional, clinically significant cytogenetic information as compared with karyotyping and was equally efficacious in identifying aneuploidies and unbalanced rearrangements but did not identify balanced translocations and triploidies. (Funded by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and others; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01279733.).


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis