Non-invasive fetal genotyping for maternal alleles with droplet digital PCR: A comparative study of analytical approaches

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Abstract

Objectives: To develop a flexible droplet digital PCR (ddPCR) workflow to perform non-invasive prenatal diagnosis via relative mutation dosage (RMD) for maternal pathogenic variants with a range of inheritance patterns, and to compare the accuracy of multiple analytical approaches. Methods: Cell free DNA (cfDNA) was tested from 124 archived maternal plasma samples: 88 cases for sickle cell disease and 36 for rare Mendelian conditions. Three analytical methods were compared: sequential probability ratio testing (SPRT), Bayesian and z-score analyses. Results: The SPRT, Bayesian and z-score analyses performed similarly well with correct prediction rates of 96%, 97% and 98%, respectively. However, there were high rates of inconclusive results for each cohort, particularly for z-score analysis which was 31% overall. Two samples were incorrectly classified by all three analytical methods; a false negative result predicted for a fetus affected with sickle cell disease and a false positive result predicting the presence of an X-linked IDS variant in an unaffected fetus. Conclusions: ddPCR can be applied to RMD for diverse conditions and inheritance patterns, but all methods carry a small risk of erroneous results. Further evaluation is required both to reduce the rate of inconclusive results and explore discordant results in more detail.

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Shaw, J., Scotchman, E., Paternoster, B., Ramos, M., Nesbitt, S., Sheppard, S., … Chandler, N. (2023). Non-invasive fetal genotyping for maternal alleles with droplet digital PCR: A comparative study of analytical approaches. Prenatal Diagnosis, 43(4), 477–488. https://doi.org/10.1002/pd.6333

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