| Literature DB >> 35822771 |
Abstract
Estimating the fetal fraction of DNA in a pregnant mother's blood is a risk-free, non-invasive way of predicting fetal aneuploidy. It is a rapidly developing field of study, offering researchers a plethora of different complementary methods. Such methods include examining the differences in methylation profiles between the fetus and the mother. Others include calculating the average allele frequency based on the difference in genotype of a number of single-nucleotide polymorphisms. Differences in the length distribution of DNA fragments between the mother and the fetus as well as measuring the proportion of DNA reads mapping to the Y chromosome also constitute fetal fraction estimation methods. The advantages and disadvantages of each of these main method types are discussed. Moreover, several well-known fetal fraction estimation methods, such as SeqFF, are described and compared with other methods. These methods are amenable to not only the estimation of fetal fraction but also paternity, cancer, and transplantation monitoring studies. NIPT is safe, and should aneuploidy be detected, this information can help parents prepare mentally and emotionally for the birth of a special needs child.Entities:
Keywords: NIPT; SNP quantification; SeqFF; Y chromosome; aneuploidy; cfDNA; differential methylation; fetal fraction; length distribution estimation
Year: 2021 PMID: 35822771 PMCID: PMC9245487 DOI: 10.3390/biotech10030017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BioTech (Basel) ISSN: 2673-6284
Common chromosomal abnormalities.
| Name | Illness |
|---|---|
| Trisomy 13 | Patau syndrome |
| Trisomy 18 | Edwards syndrome |
| Trisomy 21 | Down syndrome |
| Monosomy X | Turner syndrome |
| Trisomy X | Triple X syndrome |
| 47 [XXY] | Klinefelter syndrome |
| 47 [XYY] | Jacobs syndrome |
Factors influencing the FF.
| Factor | Implication |
|---|---|
| Confined fetal aneuploidy | False negative; fetus appears normal when really affected |
| Differential methylation | Helps tell difference between maternal and fetal DNA |
| Gestational age | Increases fetal fraction |
| IVF-induced pregnancy | Decreases fetal fraction |
| Male blood/tissue donor | Falsification of fetal sex |
| Maternal cancer | Apparently higher FF |
| Mosaic placenta | False positive; fetus appears to be affected |
| Mother’s weight | Lowers fetal fraction |
| Vanishing/unreported twin | False positive; extra twin’s DNA gives appearance of fetal aneuploidy |
Incidence of leading types of maternal cancer during pregnancy (data from Pavlidis, 2002).
| Type of Cancer | Incidence |
|---|---|
| Breast cancer | 1:3000–10,000 |
| Cervical cancer | 1.2:10,000 |
| Hodgkin’s disease | 1:1000–6000 |
| Malignant melanoma | 2.6:1000 |
| Leukemia | 1:75,000–100,000 |
| Ovarian cancer | 1:10,000–100,000 |
| Colorectal cancer | 1:13,000 |
Overview of different FF quantification methods.
| Method | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Methylation differences | Accurate | Enzymes may affect accuracy, genome-wide analysis expensive |
| SNP quantification | Accurate | Cost of genotyping, consumes large quantity of genomic material |
| Length distribution | Easy to perform | Inaccurate, but can be increased with paired-end reads |
| Y chromosome | Accurate and simple | Can only test male children |
Different classes of minor alleles based on frequency.
| Type | Frequency |
|---|---|
| Common allele | 5% < MAF |
| Low-frequency variant | 0.5% < MAF ≤ 5% |
| Rare variant | MAF ≤ 0.5% |
Figure 1Calculating fetal fraction from a homozygous. mother and heterozygous fetus regarding a single SNP.
Figure 2Length distribution of fetal DNA fragments according to different values of the FF: 10% (blue) and 20% (red).
Figure 3Calculation of the FF based on proportion of Y chromosome reads mapping to the Y chromosome and the pseudo-autosomal region of the X chromosome.
Advantages and disadvantages of several well-known FF tools.
| Software | Advantage | Disadvantage |
|---|---|---|
| BAYINDIR | Can identify low FF | Y chromosome-specific |
| DEFRAG | Can identify low FF | Y chromosome-specific |
| FetalQuantSD | No parental genotype needed | Needs large number of SNPs |
| NIPTmer | Fast | Does not handle extreme FF values |
| SANEFALCON | Can identify low FF | Non-uniform genome coverage |
| SeqFF | Gold standard, good for both genders | Many false positives |
| WisecondorX | Can use single-end and low coverage data | Exclusive for NIPT |
Common statistical measures used in FF estimation.
| Statistical Measure | Formula | Synonym |
|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity |
| Recall |
| Specificity |
| |
| Positive prediction value (PPV) |
| Precision |