Title: Recent Developments in Prenatal Screening
1Recent Developments in Prenatal Screening
2Diagnostic Tests for Chromasomal Abnormalities
- Chorionic Villus Sampling (CVS)
- Amniocentesis
- These invasive tests increase the risk of
miscarriage. - If they were applied on a population basis to
500,000 pregnancies, they would lead to about
5,000 miscarriages in unaffected pregnancies. - More than 5 miscarriages for every Down syndrome
pregnancy.
3Screening Tests
Ultrasound image data maternal serum
measurements
Bayes Theorem
Risk Pr Affected Maternal Age Markers
High Risk Offer CVS or Amniocentesis (About 5
are classified as high risk 25,000 invasive
tests and 250 miscarriages)
Low Risk
Reassurance
4Biases
- Results based on secondary data provided in the
SURUSS study of Wald et al (2003 and 2004) - Without the raw data, we cant explore the
effects of data cleaning that will cause biases
in assessment of screening performance - These biases are important
- There is a need for further prospective studies
5Some Common Protocols(detection rate fixed at
85)
Assuming a population of 500,000 pregnancies
screened.
Proportion of unaffected pregnancies classified
as high risk
Note parameters from Wald et al (2003) with
refinements of Wald et al (2004) in brackets.
6Wald et al (2003)
- The integrated test offers the most effective and
safe method of screening.
7Repeated MeasuresWright and Bradbury (2005)
PAPP-A2 denotes first and second trimester
measurements of PAPP-A.
8Why were repeated measures protocols overlooked?
- Widely held misconceptions
- Best combination combination of best
- A measurement, such as PAPP-A in the second
trimester, that has no discriminatory value on
its own is of no value in combination with other
markers - High within class correlations are a sign of
redundancy
9- Best combination combination of best
- A measurement, such as PAPP-A in the second
trimester, that has no discriminatory value on
its own is of no value in combination with other
markers - High within class correlations are a sign of
redundancy
10Problems with integrated tests
- No assessment of risk in the first trimester
- Inefficient
11Sequential ScreeningWright et al. (2004)
12Sequential Screening
Detection rate fixed at 85
13A Repeated Measures Sequential Strategy
Disposition of unaffected pregnancies
10 Weeks NT PAPP-A uE3
14 to 20 weeks PAPP-A uE3
14Disposition of affected pregnancies
10 Weeks NT PAPP-A uE3
14 to 20 weeks PAPP-A uE3
15Problems with NT
- Insufficient resources to measure NT in all
pregnancies
16Stage 1 Biochemical Tests
A three stage sequential screening policy (Wright
et al, in press)
Risk 1 in b
Screen negative
Stage 2 Nuchal Translucency
Risk 1 in c1
Risk 1 in c2
Screen negative
Most of the benefits of the full integrated
version of the test can be achieved with 70 of
pregnancies screened negative in the first stage.
Screen positive
Stage 3 Second Trimester
Risk 1 in d
Risk lt 1 in d
Screen negative
Screen positive
17Illustration
Disposition of unaffected pregnancies
Screen negative
Screen positive
18Illustration
Disposition of affected pregnancies
19Concluding remarks
- Contingent sequential screening is being used in
centres in Canada, the US and in the UK - Trials with repeated measures are being planned