Abstract
Background: This study evaluated the individual and combined diagnostic performance of the bacterial artificial chromosomes (BACs)-on-Beads (BoBs™) assay and conventional karyotyping for the prenatal detection of chromosomal abnormalities in pregnant women who were 35 or more years-old. Method: The primary outcome was concordance of any numerical, structural, or submicroscopic chromosomal abnormalities between BoBs™ and conventional karyotyping of amniotic fluid specimens from pregnant women at 17 to 22 weeks gestation. Results: We examined samples from 4852 pregnant women. BoBs™ indicated that 4708 samples were normal (97.03%), and 144 were abnormal (2.97%); conventional karyotyping indicated that 4656 (95.96%) samples were normal and 196 (4.04%) were abnormal. The combined use of both methods indicated that 4633 of 4852 samples were normal (95.49%) and 219 of 4852 samples (4.51%) were abnormal. The kappa coefficient of the combined test was 0.70, indicating substantial consistency between BoBs™ and conventional karyotyping (95% CI = 0.65-0.76, P < 0.001). Conclusions: Our results indicate that the combined use of BoBs™ and conventional karyotyping detected more fetal abnormalities than either test alone.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Miao, Z., Liu, X., Hu, F., Zhang, M., Yang, P., & Wang, L. (2019). Combined use of bacterial artificial chromosomes-on-beads with karyotype detection improves prenatal diagnosis. Molecular Cytogenetics, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13039-019-0416-6
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.