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The application of expanded noninvasive prenatal screening for genome-wide chromosomal abnormalities and genetic counseling

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-05-03, 07:00 authored by Yun Chen, Yunli Lai, Fuben Xu, Haisong Qin, Yanqing Tang, Xiaoshan Huang, Lintao Meng, Jiasun Su, Weijia Sun, Yiping Shen, Hongwei Wei

To evaluate the clinical application of expanded noninvasive prenatal screening (eNIPS) for genome-wide large copy number variation (CNV), i.e. chromosomal deletion/duplication >5 Mb, and aneuploidy; also to provide practical information for counseling eNIPS positive cases.

We recruited 34,620 women with singleton pregnancy for genome-wide cell-free plasma DNA sequencing. Screening positive cases were verified by karyotyping and/or SNP array.

A total of 461 (1.33%) positive cases were identified through our cfDNA screening including 209 cases of common trisomies (0.60%), 124 cases of sex chromosomal abnormalities (SCA) (0.36%), 71 cases of other autosomal anueploidies (OAA) (0.21%), and 57 CNVs larger than 5 Mb (0.16%). The predictive positive values (PPV) were 70.06% in general for common trisomies with as high as 91.67% for Trisomy21 (T21), 40.22% in general for SCAs with as high as 100% for Jacob Syndrome (XYY). The PPV for OAAs was 5.45%, and T7/T8/T16/T22 were the most frequent OAAs (n = 15, 9, 9, 8, respectively). The PPV for CNVs larger than 5 Mb was 51.22% (n = 57) with the CNV mostly detected on Chr5/Chr4/Chr2/Chr7 (n = 10, 8, 5, 5, respectively).

The expanded NIPS had shown promising PPVs for CNVs (large than 5 Mb), SCAs and common trisomies, yet this method required higher efficacy in screening for OAAs. The post-test genetic counseling for expanded NIPS should be tailored to the types of positive cases and also address the origin of abnormal signals (fetal vs. maternal).

Funding

This study was supported by the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region Health Commission [project number Z20190827] and by Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region Clinical Research Center for Fetal Diseases.

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