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PRENATAL GENETIC TESTING FACTS, HOPES AND CHALLENGES

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Title: PRENATAL GENETIC TESTING FACTS, HOPES AND CHALLENGES


1
PRENATAL GENETIC TESTINGFACTS, HOPES AND
CHALLENGES
  • Nancy Press, PhD
  • Schools of Nursing and Medicine
  • OHSU

2
REPRODUCTIVE GENETIC TESTING A VERY BRIEF
OVERVIEW
  • What tests exist?
  • How do they work?
  • What do they do?
  • What changes are taking place?

3
REPRODUCTIVE GENETIC TESITNG COMPRISES
  • Sample collection
  • Amniocentesis
  • CVS
  • Fetal cells in maternal serum
  • Testing modalities
  • Karyotyping
  • PCR
  • Diagnosis of specific disorders
  • Both Down Syndrome and CF can be diagnosed from a
    sample obtained through amniocentesis

4
INVASIVE MODES OF SAMPLE COLLECTION
  • Amniocentesis
  • Early amniocentesis
  • Chorionic villus sampling

5
AMNIOCENTESIS
  • A technique for removal, via a needle puncture of
    the uterus, of amniotic fluid containing fetal
    cells
  • Any genetic analysis can be performed on these
    cells
  • The usefulness of amnioc is tightly linked to
  • expanding knowledge about genetics
  • development of techniques of fetal analysis
  • changing legal and social norms.

6
AMNIOCENTESIS KARYOPTYPING
  • 1955
  • Fluid could be removed from the amniotic sac
  • Fetal cells cultured
  • Total number of chromosomes, including the sex
    chromosomes could be ascertained
  • The first use of karyopting was to identify male
    fetuses of women who carried serious genetic
    conditions on their X chromosome
  • This was before abortion was legal

7
AMNIO AND DOWN SYNDROME
  • A karyotype with 3 copies chromosome 21 (trisomy
    21) was indicative of Down Syndrome
  • Implications
  • An important source of mental retardation
  • Predicted by increasing age rather than narrow
    genetic history
  • Set pattern for first establishing technique and
    then expanding indicated diseases

8
INSTITUTIONALIZING OF AMNIOCENTESIS IN MID-1970S
  • NICHD National Registry for Amniocentesis Study
    Group demonstrated the safety of amniocentesis
  • Passage of Roe v. Wade
  • Birth of genetic counseling
  • Way was opened for population based use of
    amniocentesis for women of advanced maternal age.

9
AGE AND AMNIOCENTESIS
  • Primary medical complication is fetal loss
  • Amnio is offered at the age at which there is an
    equipoise between fetal loss and age-based risk
    of Down Syndrome
  • As safety of procedure increased, the age at
    which it is offered decreased
  • This assumes that miscarriage and disability are
    bad and equivalent events

10
EARLY AMNIOCENTESIS
  • Amniocentesis performed in the 11-13th week of
    pregnancy
  • Greeted enthusiastically initially
  • Recent data suggest possibility of significantly
    greater fetal risks
  • higher rates of pregnancy loss
  • risk of fetal malformations (e.g. club foot)
  • More technically difficult leading to greater
    failure rate

11
CHORIONIC VILLUS SAMPLING (CVS)
  • Chorionic villi are precursors of the placenta
    and a good source of fetal tissue.
  • CVS can be performed safely by 10th week both
    transabdominally and transvaginally
  • Risks compare well with second trimester
    amniocentesis
  • Waiting period for results is shorter than with
    amniocentesis 3-8 rather than 10-14 days
  • Will probably continue to gain ground as the
    early technique

12
MATERNAL SERUM FETAL CELL RECOVERY
  • A small number of fetal cells are sloughed off
    and cross into maternal blood circulation
  • In principle, these cells can then be used for
    any fetal analysis this is the promise of the
    technique
  • And it could be simple, cheap, and non-invasive
    enough to be a screen sometime in the future
  • However
  • Fetal cells in maternal blood are numerically
    rare
  • Identification and isolation is difficult
  • The type of cell most amenable to isolation is
    not ideal for chromosomal analysis

13
ULTRASOUND
  • A test unto itself
  • Used on the basis of little data for multiple,
    routine screenings
  • Shopping mall testing
  • Patient demand
  • But where did that demand come from?
  • Being used in Europe in place of multiple marker
    screening for neural tube defects

14
MULTIPLE MARKER SCREENING
  • Test revolutionized prenatal diagnosis
  • First screening test offered to all pregnant
    women solely to discover risk of fetal anomaly
  • Developed for neural tube defects later expanded
    to chromosomal abnormalities
  • Began with measure of maternal serum
    alpha-fetoprotein and added other serum markers
  • Late 1980s California was first state to mandate
    offer to all pregnant women

15
SCREENING VERSUS DIAGNOSIS
  • Screening tests search a population of apparently
    healthy persons to isolate those few at increased
    risk.
  • Screening tests should be easy, inexpensive, and
    not entail risk for screenee.
  • Screening tests can be as simple as ascertaining
    a patients age or ethnicity
  • Screening tests have high rates of initial
    positive results and must be followed by
    diagnostic testing.

16
SCREENING VERSUS DIAGNOSIS (contd)
  • Diagnostic tests are offered to individuals known
    to be at increased risk of a condition
  • Some sort of screening process must have been
    used to identify them
  • Diagnostic tests answer the question, does this
    person have this disease?
  • Diagnostic tests are more complicated and
    expensive to perform and may entail risk.
  • Diagnostic tests are expected to do a much better
    job at identifying all (sensitivity) and only
    (specificity) cases of the disorder.

17
CURRENT SCREENING PRACTICES FOR SOME POPULATION
SEGMENTS
18
CURRENT SCREENING PRACTICES FOR GENERAL POPULATION
19
MUST PREGNANT WOMEN BE DIVIDED BY AGE???
  • For 25 years maternal age has been used as a
    screen
  • Currently there is debate about these guidelines
  • This seems based largely on the trend toward
    women bearing children at later ages
  • a 2.7-fold increase from 1974 to 1997 in US
  • a dramatic increase in number of amnios, meaning
    more fetal loss and economic costs
  • The most radical suggestion for changing the
    current routine is to screen women of all ages in
    an identical manner

20
SUGGESTED ONE-AGE SCREENING PROTOCOL
21
PROS AND CONS OF ONE-STAGE APPROACH
  • Advantages
  • Believed to have 80-90 detection rate for
    trisomy 21 and other chromosomal abnormalities
  • Decrease the number of amniocenteses in older
    women
  • Increase the detection rate in younger women
    and, of course , in terms of raw numbers, younger
    women have the greatest number of DS babies

22
PROS AND CONS OF ONE-STAGE APPROACH
  • DISADVANTAGES
  • Gives up universal amnio screening of women 35
    some women would now bear a child with Down
    syndrome who wouldnt have before
  • Is it ethicaly acceptable to deny/ withdraw
    accepted medical service a form of health care
    rationing for older pregnant women
  • One-age screening detects DS, but not NTDs
  • Would not solve problem of multiple screenings
    and multiple chances for initial positive results
    and anxiety.

23
PRENATAL SCREENING AND THE EXPERIENCE OF
PREGNANCY
  • A 30 year old Southeast Asian
  • Offered standard blood work revealing anemia
  • Couple offered thalassemia carrier testing and
    are
  • Carrier couple offered CVS and are negative
  • Later offered multiple marker screening and woman
    is
  • Offered amniocentesis
  • Outcome Healthy baby and a disastrously
    upsetting and expensive pregnancy.
  • There appear to be no empirical data on the
    frequency of such experiences. However,
    variations on this theme are frequently reported
    by obstetric providers.

24
ETHICAL ISSUES IN PRENATAL TESTING
  • Different parts of the population see very
    different things
  • Religious issues
  • Disability rights
  • The therapeutic gap and genetic optimism
  • The missing abortion conversation

25
RELIGIOUS OBJECTIONS TO TESTING
  • Conservative religious positions may object to
    abortion under all circumstances
  • The link of prenatal testing and abortion is
    crystal clear to them
  • Offering ? testing is deeply objectionable
  • Clear and simple and most ? from this tradition
    know precisely what they think when they begin
    pregnancy

26
THE DISABILITY CRITIQUEA POWERFUL CRITIQUE OF
PRENATAL TESTING
  • Based on the claim that using, or even offering
    tests to detect fetal anomalies has an expressive
    character that is rejecting and hurtful to those
    who live with disability.
  • The choice to abort an otherwise desired fetus on
    the basis of one trait or characteristic, sends
    the message
  • that the lives of those with disability are not
    valuable
  • that the disability makes the child unacceptable

27
THE THERAPEUTIC GAPAND GENETIC OPTIMISM
  • Therapeutic gap describes the reality of
    genetic testing today
  • This gap has existed for some decades now
  • Huntington disease
  • Cystic fibrosis
  • Gap implies something small
  • Genetic optimism keeps the gap metaphor from
    being called into question

28
THE MISSING ABORTION CONNECTION
  • Discussion of abortion is strangely missing from
    most published work on prenatal testing, as well
    as from most discussions by providers
  • Perhaps mentioned at end of a laundry list of
    benefits
  • Stated in fairly coded way as giving the benefit
    of reproductive choice

29
WHY IS ABORTION SO ABSENT FROM THE PUBLISHED
CONVERSATION??
  • I have analyzed two types of goals stated in the
    literature about prenatal testing.
  • Societally approved goals
  • Controversial goals

30
WHAT ARE THE SOCIETALLY APPROVED GOALS?
  • Offering reassurance
  • Providing information to the health care provider
    about the state of the pregnancy
  • Allowing time for parents to prepare
    psychologically
  • Permitting special medical preparation for birth
  • Possibility of in utero treatment

31
WHAT THE SOCIETALLY APPROVED GOALS SHARE
  • Focus on benefit to woman or couple rather than
    to the society
  • Focus on joint good to mother and fetus
  • Are, in broadest sense, "for life"
  • However, they are ultimately ancillary goals

32
WHAT ARE THE CONTROVERSIAL GOALS?
  • The ability to terminate pregnancies where the
    fetus is found to have an anomaly
  • The concomitant cost-savings to society trough
    births averted.

33
WHAT THE CONTROVERSIAL GOALS SHARE
  • They imply that not all life is worthwhile
  • That the interests of society may be in conflict
    with those of the fetus
  • They raise the specter of eugenics in regard to
    prenatal diagnosis.
  • All of these are things which make Americans
    uncomfortable
  • The discourse in Europe is different AND makes
    the work of providers easier

34
WHAT ARE THESE TENSIONS LIKE EMPIRICALLY?
  • The MSAFP Screening Program in California data
    from the beginnings of the program

35
PRESS AND BROWNER WORK ON MSAFP TESTING IN
CALIFORNIA
  • Interviewed 250 pregnant ? of different race/
    ethnicity and social class
  • Interviewed before and after offer of MSAFP
  • Observed their prenatal intake appointment
  • Interviewed health care providers who offered
    screening (nurses)
  • Performed chart review of 1000 pregnant ? (re
    false positive stats)

36
FINDINGS
  • Very high level of test acceptance (85)
  • Very low comprehension of purposes of testing by
    pregnant women
  • Great emphasis by HMO on getting test offered
  • Effect of making nurses feel pressured and of
    making test seem important
  • Language of test offer all on how to get test
    done almost nothing on purpose of test

37
FINDINGS
  • Test viewed by ? as routine acceptable just as
    its meaning purpose was obscured.
  • Test became imbued with the same meanings and
    perceived purposes as routine prenatal care
  • Responsible maternal actions
  • Providing useful information
  • Reassurance
  • Protecting the fetus
  • Obscuring real purpose of MSAFP screening
  • To find cases of untreatable birth defects in
    order to allow women and couples the opportunity
    to terminate a pregnancy

38
RELUCTANT ACCEPTORS
  • I went back and forth about taking the
    test... 'I should do this I don't know why I'm
    going to do this....What if I get a positive
    result and then you're panicked because you
    think that there is some kind of problem... and
    if there is no problem you feel better but
    there's been a lot of undue stress. But if
    there is a problem, well -- you're already 24
    weeks pregnant. So then you have to make a
    choice and I can't make that choice. For me the
    choice has already been made. We're going to
    have this child.... So now I've gone through all
    of this to find out something is wrong but I'm
    not going to do anything about it anyhow. So
    then I figure, why am I taking this test? I
    don't know, and then I say to myself I'm not
    going to take it and then I come for my
    appointment and I go, 'Fine, here's my arm, take
    my blood'.... In the end it was a matter of
    needing to know everything you can and do
    everything you can."

39
SO WHATS A MIDWIFE TO DO?
  • Be aware of whole spectrum of possible tests,
    rates of initial positives, waiting periods,
    etc., rather than offering testing on a piecemeal
    basis
  • Have systems in place, whenever possible, that
    allows the patient access to varied information
    about life with the disability in question and
    not merely medical information
  • Make completely clear the choices available to
    the patient that is the cases where abortion is
    the only intervention possible

40
SO WHATS A MIDWIFE TO DO?
  • Recognize that prenatal testing poses questions
    about parenting goals and values not primarily
    medical decisions
  • Help your patient think through her/their goals
    and values in this regard
  • Be truly supportive of whichever choice the
    patient makes
  • But dont abandon them in thinking through this
    complicated information
  • Be aware of peer pressures moving couples toward
    testing but dont treat those forces as
    illegitimate
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