Blood test can detect thousands of genetic conditions in pregnancy, scientists report

Blood test can detect thousands of genetic conditions in pregnancy, scientists report

6 reported

Scientists have developed a maternal blood test that can detect thousands of serious genetic conditions in the developing foetus, potentially reducing the need for invasive screening during pregnancy. The test, called non-invasive foetal sequencing (NIFS), relies on detecting tiny fragments of foetal DNA circulating in the mother’s bloodstream. Researchers tested NIFS on 565 pregnancies at an average of 17 weeks of gestation and found it identified 95-99% of genetic variants found by invasive methods. The technique is set to be described at the European Society for Human Genetics conference in Gothenburg. Some experts praised the test as a major advance, while others warned it could cause anxiety if used for exploratory screening.

What’s reported

The test is called non-invasive foetal sequencing (NIFS).
It was tested on 565 pregnancies at an average of 17 weeks of gestation.
The test identified 95-99% of genetic variants found by invasive methods and more than 97% of clinically relevant variants.
Examples of conditions detected include Noonan syndrome, Charge syndrome, Stickler syndrome, achondroplasia, and dozens of other rare genetic disorders.
Amniocentesis carries a risk of miscarriage in about one in every 200 pregnancies.
The test will be described at the European Society for Human Genetics conference in Gothenburg.

Key figures

Dr Christopher Whelan, senior computational scientist at the Broad Institute of Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University
Prof Alexandre Reymond, University of Lausanne (not involved in the research)
Prof Angus Clarke, clinical geneticist at Cardiff University

Sources: The Guardian

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