Prospective prenatal cell-free DNA screening for genetic conditions of heterogenous etiologies.
Jinglan ZhangYan-Ting WuSongchang ChenQiong LuoHui XiJianli LiXiaomei QinYing PengNa MaBingxin YangXiang QiuWeiliang LuYuan ChenYing JiangPanpan ChenYifeng LiuChen ZhangZhiwei ZhangYu XiongJie ShenHuan LiangYunyun RenChunmei YingMinyue DongXiaotian LiCongjian XuHua WangDan ZhangXian-Ling CaoHe-Feng HuangPublished in: Nature medicine (2024)
Prenatal cell-free DNA (cfDNA) screening uses extracellular fetal DNA circulating in the peripheral blood of pregnant women to detect prevalent fetal chromosomal anomalies. However, numerous severe conditions with underlying single-gene defects are not included in current prenatal cfDNA screening. In this prospective, multicenter and observational study, pregnant women at elevated risk for fetal genetic conditions were enrolled for a cfDNA screening test based on coordinative allele-aware target enrichment sequencing. This test encompasses the following three of the most frequent pathogenic genetic variations: aneuploidies, microdeletions and monogenic variants. The cfDNA screening results were compared to invasive prenatal or postnatal diagnostic test results for 1,090 qualified participants. The comprehensive cfDNA screening detected a genetic alteration in 135 pregnancies with 98.5% sensitivity and 99.3% specificity relative to standard diagnostics. Of 876 fetuses with suspected structural anomalies on ultrasound examination, comprehensive cfDNA screening identified 55 (56.1%) aneuploidies, 6 (6.1%) microdeletions and 37 (37.8%) single-gene pathogenic variants. The inclusion of targeted monogenic conditions alongside chromosomal aberrations led to a 60.7% increase (from 61 to 98) in the detection rate. Overall, these data provide preliminary evidence that a comprehensive cfDNA screening test can accurately identify fetal pathogenic variants at both the chromosome and single-gene levels in high-risk pregnancies through a noninvasive approach, which has the potential to improve prenatal evaluation of fetal risks for severe genetic conditions arising from heterogenous molecular etiologies. ClinicalTrials.gov registration: ChiCTR2100045739 .
Keyphrases
- copy number
- pregnant women
- genome wide
- peripheral blood
- magnetic resonance imaging
- clinical trial
- gene expression
- dna methylation
- early onset
- preterm birth
- gestational age
- ultrasound guided
- single cell
- cross sectional
- single molecule
- cancer therapy
- artificial intelligence
- circulating tumor
- deep learning
- drug induced
- cell free
- genome wide analysis