First Trimester Risk Assessment Based on Ultrasound and Cell-free DNA vs Combined Screening
Aneuploidy
About this trial
This is an interventional other trial for Aneuploidy
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Pregnant women with singleton gestations
- ≤12 6/7 weeks of gestation
- Normal ultrasound examination at the time of randomization
- >18 <45 years
- Crown-rump length (CRL) <84 mm at the time of randomization
Exclusion Criteria:
- Multiple gestations, including vanishing twins
- >12 6/7 weeks of gestation
- Ectopic pregnancy
- Abnormal ultrasound examination at the time of first prenatal visit
- Women who are unconscious, severly ill, mentally handicapped, or under the age of 18 years.
- Women who have already planned for invasive prenatal testing, e.g. for a history of prior child or pregnancy with chromosomal or genetic abnormalities
- CRL >84mm at the time of randomization
Sites / Locations
- Gabriele Saccone
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Other
NIPT
Combined screening
Women randomized in the intervention group will be offered cfDNA screening, along with an early detailed anatomy scan, including nuchal measurement, at 11-13 weeks of gestation. cfDNA analysis will include a simultaneous microarray-based assay of non-polymorphic (chromosomes 13, 18, 21, X and Y) and polymorphic loci to estimate chromosome proportion and fetal fraction. NIPT will be performed at the time of randomization or after if gestational age at randomization < 9 6/7 weeks of gestation.
Control group includes the standard of care. In our department, first-trimester risk assessment is performed routinely at 11-13 weeks of gestation by FTCS as per standard of care. FTCS includes crown-rump length, NT measurements, and a detailed ultrasound examination based on ISUOG guidelines. All operators who perform this examination are certified by the UK Fetal Medicine Foundation (FMF). A specific risk for aneuploidy is not calculated if NT measurement is >3.5 mm or if fetal anomaly is identified. These cases are deemed to be at a very high risk for chromosomal abnormalities and are offered invasive testing.