Sequential Pathways of Testing After First-Trimester Screening for Trisomy 21

Publication Description

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

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



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
Obstetrics and gynecology (New York. 1953)

Publication Year
2004

Publication Date
Oct

Place of Publication
United States

ISSN/ISBN
0029-7844

Document Object Index
10.1097/01.AOG.0000139832.79658.b9