Objective: Evaluation of combined test in pregnant women 35 years of age and over to detect fetal Down syndrome. Materials and Methods: The study population included 408 pregnant women of 35 years and over, who requested the combined test (nuchal translucency, PAPP-A, free beta hCG, maternal age, cut-off 1:250) before deciding whether to undergo amniocentesis. Results: The test was positive in 66 women who then requested amniocentesis for fetal karyotype determination; the other women had a negative test and declined amniocentesis. False-positives increased with maternal age from 6.6% at 35 years to about 50% at 40 to 41 and 100% in women over 41. Six cases of Down syndrome and two cases of trisomy 18 were detected. Not a single case of Down syndrome or trisomy 18 was missed, and other chromosome abnormalities were detected as well. Conclusions: The application of the combined test reduced the need for invasive testing to only 14% of the studied pregnant population, without missing any of the fetuses with trisomy 21 or 18. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Centini, G., Rosignoli, L., Scarinci, R., Faldini, E., Morra, C., Centini, G.A., et al. (2005). Re-evaluation of risk for Down syndrome by means of the combined test in pregnant women of 35 years or more. PRENATAL DIAGNOSIS, 25(2), 133-136 [10.1002/pd.1036].
Re-evaluation of risk for Down syndrome by means of the combined test in pregnant women of 35 years or more
CENTINI, G.;PETRAGLIA, F.
2005-01-01
Abstract
Objective: Evaluation of combined test in pregnant women 35 years of age and over to detect fetal Down syndrome. Materials and Methods: The study population included 408 pregnant women of 35 years and over, who requested the combined test (nuchal translucency, PAPP-A, free beta hCG, maternal age, cut-off 1:250) before deciding whether to undergo amniocentesis. Results: The test was positive in 66 women who then requested amniocentesis for fetal karyotype determination; the other women had a negative test and declined amniocentesis. False-positives increased with maternal age from 6.6% at 35 years to about 50% at 40 to 41 and 100% in women over 41. Six cases of Down syndrome and two cases of trisomy 18 were detected. Not a single case of Down syndrome or trisomy 18 was missed, and other chromosome abnormalities were detected as well. Conclusions: The application of the combined test reduced the need for invasive testing to only 14% of the studied pregnant population, without missing any of the fetuses with trisomy 21 or 18. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.
https://hdl.handle.net/11365/6523
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