To evaluate the performance and use of second-trimester multiple-marker maternal serum screening for trisomy 21 by women who had previously undergone first-trimester combined screening (nuchal translucency, pregnancy-associated plasma protein A, and free beta-hCG), with disclosure of risk estimates. In a multicenter, first-trimester screening study sponsored by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, multiple-marker maternal serum screening with alpha-fetoprotein, unconjugated estriol, and total hCG was performed in 4,145 (7 with trisomy 21) of 7,392 (9 with trisomy 21) women who were first-trimester screen-negative and 180 (7 with trisomy 21) of 813 (52 with trisomy 21) who were first-trimester screen-positive. Second-trimester risks were calculated using multiples of the median and a standardized risk algorithm with a cutoff risk of 1:270. Among the first-trimester screen-negative cohort, 6 of 7 (86%) trisomy 21 cases were detected by second-trimester multiple-marker maternal serum screening with a false-positive rate of 8.9%. Among the first-trimester screen-positive cohort, all 7 trisomy 21 cases were also detected in the second trimester, albeit with a 38.7% false-positive rate. Our data demonstrate that a sequential screening program that provides patients with first-trimester results and offers the option for early invasive testing or additional serum screening in the second trimester can detect 98% of trisomy 21-affected pregnancies. However, such an approach will result in 17% of patients being considered at risk and, hence, potentially having an invasive test. II-2
Sequential Pathways of Testing After First-Trimester Screening for Trisomy 21
Publication Description
Primary Author
Platt,Lawrence D.
Greene,Naomi
Johnson,Anthony
Zachary,Julia
Thom,Elizabeth
Krantz,David
Simpson,Joe Leigh
Silver,Richard K.
Snijders,Rosalinde J. M.
Goetzl,Laura
Pergament,Eugene
Filkins,Karen
Mahoney,Maurice J.
Hogge,W. Allen
Wilson,R. Douglas
Mohide,Patrick
Hershey,Douglas
MacGregor,Scott
Bahado-Singh,Ray
Jackson,Laird G.
Wapner,Ronald
Volume
104
Issue
4
Start Page
661
Other Pages
666
URL
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15458882
PMID
15458882