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Noninvasive detection of fetal subchromosomal abnormalities by semiconductor sequencing of maternal plasma DNA

Authors :
Rachel Q. Xue
Huang Quanfei
Daniel Zhang
Yangyi Chen
Mindy Zhang
Jiexia Yang
Kang Zhang
Rui Hou
Chang Liu
Dong-hong Luo
Yiming Qi
Michael Ai
Ai-hua Yin
Jian Liu
Mingqin Mai
Lianghong Zheng
Hailiang Liu
Dongmei Wang
Michal Krawczyk
Bennett A. Caughey
Chun-fang Peng
Fangfang Guo
Michael Karin
Yunan Wang
Wei-wei Huang
Xin Zhao
Jing Wu
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 112:14670-14675
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2015.

Abstract

Noninvasive prenatal testing (NIPT) using sequencing of fetal cell-free DNA from maternal plasma has enabled accurate prenatal diagnosis of aneuploidy and become increasingly accepted in clinical practice. We investigated whether NIPT using semiconductor sequencing platform (SSP) could reliably detect subchromosomal deletions/duplications in women carrying high-risk fetuses. We first showed that increasing concentration of abnormal DNA and sequencing depth improved detection. Subsequently, we analyzed plasma from 1,456 pregnant women to develop a method for estimating fetal DNA concentration based on the size distribution of DNA fragments. Finally, we collected plasma from 1,476 pregnant women with fetal structural abnormalities detected on ultrasound who also underwent an invasive diagnostic procedure. We used SSP of maternal plasma DNA to detect subchromosomal abnormalities and validated our results with array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH). With 3.5 million reads, SSP detected 56 of 78 (71.8%) subchromosomal abnormalities detected by aCGH. With increased sequencing depth up to 10 million reads and restriction of the size of abnormalities to more than 1 Mb, sensitivity improved to 69 of 73 (94.5%). Of 55 false-positive samples, 35 were caused by deletions/duplications present in maternal DNA, indicating the necessity of a validation test to exclude maternal karyotype abnormalities. This study shows that detection of fetal subchromosomal abnormalities is a viable extension of NIPT based on SSP. Although we focused on the application of cell-free DNA sequencing for NIPT, we believe that this method has broader applications for genetic diagnosis, such as analysis of circulating tumor DNA for detection of cancer.

Details

ISSN :
10916490 and 00278424
Volume :
112
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b96c58502b095a674d6f44ff90a98f9d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1518151112