| Literature DB >> 33004009 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Non-invasive prenatal testing (NIPT) has revolutionized the prenatal screening landscape with its high accuracy and low false positive rate for detecting Trisomy 21, 18 and 13. Good understanding of its benefits and limitations is crucial for obstetricians to provide effective counselling and make informed decisions about its use. This study aimed to evaluate obstetrician knowledge and attitudes regarding NIPT for screening for the common trisomies, explore how obstetricians integrated NIPT into first-line and contingent screening, and determine whether expanded use of NIPT to screen for sex chromosome aneuploidies (SCAs) and microdeletion/microduplication syndromes (CNVs) was widespread.Entities:
Keywords: Down syndrome; First trimester screening; Non-invasive prenatal screening; Non-invasive prenatal testing; Prenatal screening; Trisomy 21
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33004009 PMCID: PMC7528474 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-020-03279-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Demographic distribution of respondents
| Question | Number (%) |
|---|---|
| Practice setting | |
| Public | 63 (67) |
| Private | 31 (33) |
| Level of expertise | |
| Medical officer | 21 (22.3) |
| Registrar | 18 (19.1) |
| Consultant | 55 (58.5) |
| Years in practice | |
| 4 or less | 12 (12.8) |
| 5–10 | 41 (43.6) |
| 11–15 | 10 (10.6) |
| > 15 | 31 (33) |
| Percentage of practice in obstetrics | |
| < 25% | 5 (5.3) |
| 25–50% | 36 (38.3) |
| 50–75% | 43 (45.7) |
| > 75% | 10 (10.6) |
| Maternal-foetal medicine (MFM) specialist | |
| Yes | 11 (11.7) |
| No | 83 (88.3) |
Confidence in providing Pre and Post-Test Counselling
| How comfortable are you with discussing the: | Median Confidence Scores (Range) |
|---|---|
| Clinical features of Trisomy 21 | 5 (3–5) |
| Accuracy and limitations of NIPT for T21, T18 and T13 | 4 (2–5) |
| Accuracy and limitations of NIPT for SCAs | 4 (2–5) |
| Options if patient receives a high risk NIPT result | 4 (1–5) |
Options offered for Down syndrome screening in the first trimester
| Singleton Foetus | DCDA Twins | MCDA Twins | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7 (7.4) | 16 (17) | 13 (13.8) | |
| 74 (78.7) | 65 (69.1) | 64 (68.1) | |
| 43 (45.7) | 16 (17) | 29 (30.9) | |
| 25 (26.6) | 15 (16) | 13 (13.8) | |
| 33 (35.1) | 11 (11.7) | 20 (21.3) | |
Invasive testing: 2 (2.1) Two-step contingency testing 1 (1.7) | Invasive testing: 2 (2.1) | Invasive testing: 2 (2.1) |
Fig. 1NIPT for sex chromosome aneuploidies and microdeletions/duplications
Options offered at varying FTS risk levels
| No further testing | NIPT | Invasive testing | Termination of Pregnancy | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The adjusted risk for T21 is 1:670 on FTS (Intermediate risk) | 28 (29.8%) | 89 (94.7%) | 14 (14.9%) | 0 (0%) |
| The adjusted risk for T21 is 1:86 on FTS (High risk) | 11 (11.7%) | 73 (77.7%) | 81 (86.2%) | 0 (0%) |
| The adjusted risk for T21 is 1:7 on FTS (Very high risk) | 11 (11.7%) | 20 (21.3%) | 92 (97.9%) | 2 (2.1%) |
Overall scores
| Clinical Knowledge Score | Median (95% CI) |
|---|---|
| Overall | 10 (10–11) |
| MFM | 11 (9.7–12) |
| Non-MFM | 10 (10–11) |
| Specialists | 11 (10–11) |
| Non-Specialists | 10 (9.89–11) |
Clinical Knowledge Scores
| Correct Answer | Correct response, n (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Where does cell-free DNA originate from? | Placenta cells | 74 (78.7%) |
| NIPT can be offered from 8 weeks of pregnancy. | False | 86 (91.5%) |
| All the chromosomal abnormalities diagnosed via amniocentesis can be detected via NIPT. | False | 91 (96.8%) |
| NIPT is a diagnostic test for Trisomy 21. | False | 91 (96.8%) |
| A high risk NIPT result should be confirmed with invasive testing. | True | 94 (100%) |
| NIPT has a better detection rate for Trisomy 21 than FTS. | True | 85 (90.4%) |
| NIPT has a lower false-positive rate for Trisomy 21 than FTS. | True | 69 (73.4%) |
| In which of the following scenarios is NIPT more likely to fail (i.e. give a “no call” result)? | ||
| Foetal aneuploidy | True | 65 (69.1%) |
| Hypertension | False | 90 (95.7%) |
| Low maternal body mass index (BMI) | False | 81 (86.2%) |
| Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (DM) | False | 58 (61.7%) |
| Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) | True | 39 (41.5%) |