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Placental Cell-Free DNA
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Placental Cell-Free DNA
, Fetal Cell Free DNA, Cell-Free DNA, Noninvasive Prenatal Testing, NIPT
See Also
Antenatal Screening
Aneuploidy Screening
First Trimester Education
Second Trimester Education
Pregnancy Risk Assessment
Trisomy Findings on Fetal Ultrasound
Nuchal Translucency
Second Trimester Ultrasound
Indications
Congenital defect screening in pregnancy (e.g.
Trisomy 21
, Trisomy 18, Trisomy 13, Sex
Chromosome
Aneuploidy
) AND
High risk women for child with congenital defects
Maternal Age 35 years or older
Ultrasound
findings at higher risk of
Aneuploidy
Prior chromosomal defect in pregnancy (esp.
Trisomy 21
, Trisomy 18, Trisomy 13)
Positive results on
First Trimester Combined Screening
or
Second Trimester Quad Maternal Screen Panel
(2015) Am J Obstet Gynecol 212(6):711-6 [PubMed]
Mechanism
Placental DNA fragments circulate in maternal blood as Fetal Cell-Free DNA
Maternal serum is collected and Fetal DNA is isolated and amplified
Fetal DNA distribution from each
Chromosome
is quantified, therefore able to predict
Aneuploidy
Protocol
Obtain sample after 10 weeks gestation
Testing earlier than 10 weeks may obtain too little fetal DNA to characterize accurately (see low fetal fraction below)
Confirm positive results with invasive testing (
Chorionic Villus Sampling
or
Amniocentesis
)
Efficacy
Trisomy 21
Test Sensitivity
: 99.7%
Test Sensitivity
in
Twin Pregnancy
: 99%
Negative Predictive Value
>99% regardless of age
False Positive Rate
is 0.04% (contrast with rates of 3-5% for
Quad Screen
)
Positive Predictive Value
(PPV) changes significantly with advancing maternal age
Age 20 years old PPV: 68% (
Trisomy 21
Prevalence
1 per 1177)
Age 25 years old PPV: 71% (
Trisomy 21
Prevalence
1 per 1040)
Age 30 years old PPV: 78% (
Trisomy 21
Prevalence
1 per 700)
Age 35 years old PPV: 89% (
Trisomy 21
Prevalence
1 per 296)
Age 40 years old PPV: 97% (
Trisomy 21
Prevalence
1 per 86)
Efficacy
Trisomy 18
Test Sensitivity
: 78.9 to 97.9%
Test Sensitivity
in
Twin Pregnancy
: 85%
False Positive Rate
: 0.01 to 0.04%
Causes
Low Fetal Fraction (results too low to report)
Testing earlier than 10 weeks gestation
Obesity
Low Fetal Fraction in 10% who weigh >100 kg
Low Fetal Fraction in 51% who weigh >160 kg
Causes
Abnormal Cell-Free DNA with Normal Invasive Testing
Placental Mosaicism
Maternal
Aneuploidy
Occult Maternal Malignancy
References
Gil (2017) Ultrasound Obstet Gynecol 50(3): 302-14 [PubMed]
LeFevre (2020) Am Fam Physician 101(8):481-8 [PubMed]
Liao (2017) Prenat Diagn 37(9): 874-82 [PubMed]
Norton (2015) N Engl J Med 372(17): 1589-97 [PubMed]
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