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Test performance and clinical utility of expanded non‐invasive prenatal test: Experience on 71,883 unselected routine cases from one single center

Monica Faieta, Rossella Falcone, Sara Del Duca, Elena Corsetti, Riccardo Giannico, Laura Gigante, Laura Diano, Graziella Calugi, Francesca Spinella, Francesca Pizzuti

2024Prenatal Diagnosis15 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The balance between benefits and risks of discordant outcomes makes the Genome-Wide Non-Invasive Prenatal Test (GW-NIPT) controversial. This study aims to evaluate performance and clinical utility in a wide cohort of unselected clinical cases from a single center when a standardized protocol is applied and integrated with a secondary algorithm for data interpretation. METHOD: In 2 years, over 70,000 pregnant patients underwent GW-NIPT for fetal common trisomies, sex chromosome aneuploidies, rare autosomal aneuploidies, segmental abnormalities (CNVs ≥ 7 Mb) and microdeletions (CNVs < 7 Mb). All samples were uniformly processed with Veriseq NIPT Solution v2 and analyzed using all data metrics along with a home-made algorithm for sequencing data analysis. Results were retrospectively reviewed for clinical outcomes. RESULTS: Among 71,883 eligible cases including twin pregnancies, 1011 (1.4%) received a positive result and 781 were confirmed by invasive prenatal diagnosis. Clinical sensitivity ranged from 99.65% for common trisomy (T21, T18, T13) to 83.33% for microdeletions, while specificity remained high (99.98%) for each class of fetal abnormalities detected. CONCLUSIONS: Integrating a standardized protocol with an internal algorithm allowed discordant results to be reduced, yielding high accuracy. Observed reliability in detecting genome-wide chromosomal conditions reinforced the expanded NIPT utility in clinical practice.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineTrisomyPrenatal diagnosisCohortAneuploidyObstetricsRetrospective cohort studyPregnancyGynecologyChromosomeFetusInternal medicineBiologyGeneticsGenePrenatal Screening and DiagnosticsGenomic variations and chromosomal abnormalitiesFetal and Pediatric Neurological Disorders