Genetic Screening - Part 3 Flashcards

1
Q

Why do we do FISH tests in prenatal diagnosis?

A
  • Rapid diagnosis after amniocentesis by targeted molecular approaches.
  • National Screening Committee said a test would be available within 3 days for a woman who has been given a positive screening result.
  • Also can use QF-PCR.
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2
Q

What were the driving forces behind the use of rapid screen technology in prenatal diagnosis?

A
  • Women themselves and clinical staff. Stressful time between sampling and availability of final diagnostic result.
  • Standardisation of serum screening programmes (NICE):
  • National availability of a Down syndrome screening test to all pregnant women.
  • Prescribed standards of detection rates and false positive rates.
  • National Screening Committee Guidelines.
  • “A molecular test result should be available within three working days of diagnostic sampling” - National Screening Committee.
  • Aneuploidy testing for trisomy 13, 18 and 21.
  • You do not need dividing cells to perform these tests.
  • Results available within 24 hours.
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3
Q

What is one of the main advantages of FISH?

A
  • You don’t need dividing cells.
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4
Q

What problems might we have with the prenatal FISH test?

A
  • MCC - trace of blood contamination in amniotic fluid samples - can;t then offer FISH safely.
  • About 2.4% of pregnancies couldn’t offer rapid FISH for.
  • In a normal pop will get about 0-15% of cells showing 3 signals for the target chromosome. In a fully trisomic individual would expect to see 75-100% of cells showing 3 signals. Between 15% and 75% is more ambiguous.
  • There are a number of possibilities when the % of cells showing 3 signals are in the ambiguous range:

1) . High background - extra signal artefact - in which case you are at risk of a false positive.
2) . MCC - dilutes extra signal - in which case you are at risk of a false negative.
3) . Genuine mosaicism.

  • The move over to QF-PCR was partly due to these problems with FISH testing.
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5
Q

What is prenatal FISH still used for in centres that primarily use QF-PCR for rapid prenatal tests?

A
  • To confirm an abnormality detected by QF-PCR - pool cells from an existing cytogenetic culture.
  • For any query that relates to a possible sex chromosome aneuploidy / micro deletion syndrome - the referral card must clearly indicate that this test is required.
  • As a backup service to the QF-PCR test in case of technical problems.
  • As part of the CVS service - FISH rapid testing will be used where direct chromosome preps are unsuccessful - FISH rapid testing on direct preps showing trisomy 13 or 18.
  • It is important to follow up a rapid test with more detailed chromosome analysis. Rapid tests can give false positives / false negatives.
  • Two scenarios show the importance of combining rapid results with chromosome analysis:
    1) . Rapid testing leading to a false result.
    2) . FISH/rapid testing needed to confirm chromosomally abnormal direct preps.
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6
Q

Outline future technologies in prenatal diagnosis.

A

Other molecular techniques for aneuploidy detections:

1) . QF-PCR systems - improved throughput and efficiency - use for sex chromosome aneuploidy testing. Routine in several labs in the UK.
2) . MLPA or other copy number detection systems for aneuploidy screening.
3) . DNA micro array systems for use in prenatal diagnosis adjunct / primary analysis for a specific referral subset (e.g. abnormal scan referrals).
4) . Foetal cell or cell free foetal DNA / RNA in maternal circulation - analysis of foetal sex, paternal mutation / Rhesus phenotype / aneuploidy testing.

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