PRTODAY / NewswireToday Free press release distribution service network

More news: Health/Surgery
Agency / Source: Women & Infants Hospital

Check Ads Availability|e-mail Article
This article was published free of charge. Only PREMIUM Articles are 3rd party Ads-Free!

Study Shows that New DNA Test to Identify Down Syndrome in Pregnancy is Ready for Clinical Use - Research by Drs. Jacob Canick and Glenn Palomaki from Women & Infants Hospital and Brown University published in Genetics in Medicine - WIHRI.org
Study Shows that New DNA Test to Identify Down Syndrome in Pregnancy is Ready for Clinical Use

 

NewswireToday - /newswire/ - Providence, RI, United States, 10/17/2011 - Research by Drs. Jacob Canick and Glenn Palomaki from Women & Infants Hospital and Brown University published in Genetics in Medicine - WIHRI.org.

   
 


Rank or share this free Newswire Press Release Distribution content. Join the network! Learn How!


Your Banner Ad Here instead - Showing along with ALL Articles covering Health/Surgery Announcements

Replace these Affiliate Programs at ANYTIME! Your banner here within the next hour.


 

A new DNA-based prenatal blood test that can strikingly reduce the number of risky diagnostic procedures needed to identify a pregnancy with Down syndrome is ready to be introduced into clinical practice. The test can be offered as early as 10 weeks of pregnancy to women who have been identified as being at high risk for Down syndrome. These are the results of an international, multicenter study published online today in the journal Genetics in Medicine. The study, the largest and most comprehensive done to date, examined almost 1,700 pregnancies at high risk of chromosomal abnormalities, 212 of which were affected by Down syndrome.

The research was led by Jacob Canick, PhD, and Glenn Palomaki, PhD, of the Division of Medical Screening and Special Testing in the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at Women & Infants Hospital and The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, and included scientists at Sequenom, Inc. and Sequenom Center for Molecular Medicine, San Diego, CA, and an independent academic laboratory at the University of California at Los Angeles.

The test identified 98.6% of the Down syndrome pregnancies, while only 0.2% of the normal pregnancies were mistakenly called positive. The test rarely failed to provide a clinical interpretation (0.8%). These findings, along with the detailed information learned from testing such a large number of samples, demonstrate that the new test will be highly effective when offered to women considering invasive testing.

“With current screening methods, about one in every 30 women offered a follow-up invasive diagnostic procedure - amniocentesis or chorionic villus sampling (CVS) - will be found to have a pregnancy with Down syndrome. We expect the DNA-based test to more accurately determine which women should be offered invasive diagnostic testing. As a result, most of the pregnancies referred for amniocentesis or CVS will be found to have Down syndrome,” said Dr. Canick.

Dr. Palomaki added,“If this new test is used as we’ve described, nearly all women with a normal pregnancy could avoid an invasive diagnostic procedure and its associated anxiety, cost, and potential for fetal loss.”

Down syndrome, also called trisomy 21, is a chromosomal disorder that includes mental retardation, characteristic facial features, and, often, heart defects, and affects one in 550 babies born each year in the US. Down syndrome occurs when each cell in an individual has three rather than the usual two copies of chromosome number 21. Current prenatal screening tests for Down syndrome combine maternal age with information from the measurement of maternal serum markers and ultrasound markers in the first and second trimesters of pregnancy. While these tests can detect up to 90% of Down syndrome cases, they also incorrectly identify 2% to 5% of normal pregnancies as positive. The new DNA-based test will reduce this “false positive” rate while maintaining the detection rate.

“Prenatal screening and diagnosis of Down syndrome has been part of routine prenatal care for decades, and it is estimated that nearly two-thirds of all pregnant women in the US are currently screened,” said Dr. Canick. “It is possible that with the availability of this new DNA-based test, more women will opt for screening because of the increased safety resulting from far fewer amniocentesis and CVS procedures being performed.” The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated in 1995 that about one in every 200 invasive diagnostic procedures will cause a pregnancy miscarriage.

This industry-sponsored project, awarded to Drs. Canick and Palomaki and Women & Infants Hospital in 2008, enrolled 4,500 women at 27 prenatal diagnostic centers throughout the world. Women & Infants also served as one of the enrollment centers under the direction of maternal-fetal medicine specialist and director of Perinatal Genetics, Barbara O’Brien, MD.

“Screening tests, by their nature, do not diagnose, but rather offer information about the chances that a pregnancy may be affected by a genetic abnormality. For years we have relied on screening tests that have had a fairly significant false positive rate because that was the best screening available,” said Dr. O’Brien. “But having access to a DNA-based test that can be done early in pregnancy will give us more information so that we can better guide which patients should consider diagnostic testing.”

Women & Infants Hospital has been an international center for prenatal screening research. For more than three decades, Drs. Canick and Palomaki have collaborated with others in developing and improving screening tests for Down syndrome and other fetal abnormalities. In 1988, Drs. Canick and Palomaki were involved in the development of triple marker screening. The team was able to convert its findings into prenatal screening tests now used throughout the world. Dr. Canick’s lab in 1998 was the first in the US to offer quad marker screening and in the past decade was the laboratory center for the National Institute of Health (NIH) funded FASTER Trial which compared first and second trimester screening.

It was announced today that one version of this laboratory-developed test, MaterniT21, has been validated through clinical studies and is now available through the Sequenom Center for Molecular Medicine, a CLIA-certified and CAP-accredited laboratory. Harry F. Hixson Jr., PhD, chairman and CEO of Sequenom, Inc., said,“We have been fortunate to partner in the clinical study and are proud to offer the service to assist specialists and high-risk patients in making more informed decisions about their pregnancy.”

About Women & Infants Hospital
Women & Infants Hospital of Rhode Island (wihri.org), a Care New England hospital, is one of the nation’s leading specialty hospitals for women and newborns. A U.S.News Best Hospital in Gynecology and Best Children’s Hospital in Neonatology, Women & Infants was ranked number one in the Providence metro area and a top-performer in cancer, and has achieved a 5-star rating in Maternity Care for 2011 from HealthGrades. The primary teaching affiliate of The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University for obstetrics, gynecology and newborn pediatrics, as well as a number of specialized programs in women’s medicine, Women & Infants is the seventh largest obstetrical service in the country with more than 8,500 deliveries per year. In 2009, Women & Infants opened the country’s largest, single-family room neonatal intensive care unit.

New England’s premier hospital for women and newborns, Women & Infants and Brown offer fellowship programs in gynecologic oncology, maternal-fetal medicine, urogynecology and reconstructive pelvic surgery, neonatal-perinatal medicine, pediatric and perinatal pathology, gynecologic pathology and cytopathology, and reproductive endocrinology and infertility. It is home to the nation’s only mother-baby perinatal psychiatric partial hospital, as well as the nation’s only fellowship program in obstetric medicine.

Women & Infants has been designated as a Breast Center of Excellence from the American College of Radiography; a Center for In Vitro Maturation Excellence by SAGE In Vitro Fertilization; a Center of Biomedical Research Excellence by the National Institutes of Health; and a Neonatal Resource Services Center of Excellence. It is one of the largest and most prestigious research facilities in high risk and normal obstetrics, gynecology and newborn pediatrics in the nation, and is a member of the National Cancer Institute’s Gynecologic Oncology Group.

About Brown University
Founded in 1764 and a member of the Ivy League, Brown University is globally acclaimed for its culture of independent thinking and academic excellence. For decades, Brown faculty and students have pursued multidisciplinary research in areas such as brain science, digital humanities, nanoscience, and population studies

 
 


Rank or share this free Newswire Press Release Distribution content. Join the network! Learn How!


Your Banner Ad Here instead - Showing along with ALL Articles covering Health/Surgery Announcements

Replace these Affiliate Programs at ANYTIME! Your banner here within the next hour.


 

Agency / Source: Women & Infants Hospital

 
 

Availability: All Regions (Including Int'l)

 

Traffic Booster: [/] Quick Newswire Today Visibility Checker

 

Distribution / Indexing: [+]

 
 
# # #
 
 
  Your Banner Ad showing on ALL
Health/Surgery articles,
CATCH Visitors via Your Competitors Announcements!


Study Shows that New DNA Test to Identify Down Syndrome in Pregnancy is Ready for Clinical Use

Non-featured company website links are shown on a random basis
It is OK to republish and/or LINK any newswire for any legitimate media purpose as long as you name Newswire Today and LINK as the source.
 
  For more information, please visit:
Links are available on a random basis for non premium members
|
Contact: Amy Blustein - WIHRI.org 
401-681-2822 ablustein[.]wihri.org
 
Newswire Today - PRZOOM / PRTODAY disclaims any content contained in this article. If you need/wish to contact the company who published the current release, you will need to contact them - NOT us. Issuers of articles are solely responsible for the accuracy of their content. Our complete disclaimer appears here.
IMPORTANT INFORMATION: Issuance, publication or distribution of this press release in certain jurisdictions could be subject to restrictions. The recipient of this press release is responsible for using this press release and the information herein in accordance with the applicable rules and regulations in the particular jurisdiction. This press release does not constitute an offer or an offering to acquire or subscribe for any Women & Infants Hospital securities in any jurisdiction including any other companies listed or named in this release.

Health/Surgery via RSS
AddThis press release: Study Shows that New DNA Test to Identify Down Syndrome in Pregnancy is Ready for Clinical UseAdd Health/Surgery News to My MSNAdd Health/Surgery News to My Yahoo!Add NewswireToday Health/Surgery Press Release Headline News to Your Google homepage or Google ReaderAdd NewswireToday - PRZOOM Headline News to FeedBurner
Find who Retweet

This article was published free of charge. Only PREMIUM Articles are 3rd party Ads-Free!


Read Latest Articles From Women & Infants Hospital / Company Profile



Women & Infants Physician to be Honored As 'Legend'
Urogynecologist Joins Women & Infants' Staff
Two Care New England Selected for New Innovation Advisors Program to Improve Patient Care
Surgeon Brings New Oncoplastic Surgical Approach to New England
Doctors Named 'Top' in Reproductive Endocrinology
Study Shows that New DNA Test to Identify Down Syndrome in Pregnancy is Ready for Clinical Use
Women & Infants Introduces Integrated Program for High-Risk Pregnancy
Women & Infants Earns Three Designations in U.S. News & World Report's 2011-12 Best Hospitals Rankings
Care New England Announces New Chief Executive Officer
Women & Infants Ranks 34th in Neonatology in U.S. News Media Groups Best Children's Hospitals
Program Earns CoC Outstanding Achievement Award
Women & Infants Urogynecologists Bring Specialty Care to Women of Rwanda
Breast Health Center Earns National Accreditation
Women & Infants Named Center of Excellence for Neonatal Care for Fifth Year
Women & Infants Holds 127th Annual Meeting

Reserve This Permanent SPACE

Your LOGO permanently HERE on Newswire Today most visited Page start at $295 per month

 
Sponsored Links


Visit Impact & Echo BBDO

Visit  Media5 Corporation










 
  ©2012 Newswire Today — Limelon Advertising, Co.
Home | About | Advertise | Contact | Investors | Sitemap | FRANCAIS
newswire, PR free press releases distribution magazines engine news alert newsroom press room breaking news public relations articles company news alerts blogsIt younews.me newswiredistribution ezine younews.asia bizentrepreneur biznewstoday digital business report market search pr firms agencies reports distri- bution today investor relation successful internet entrepreneur free newswire distribution prtoday.com freenewswiredistribution asianewstoday bizwiretoday USA pr UK today
 
PRTODAY & NewswireTODAY are NOT affiliated with USA TODAY (usatoday.com)