Safer Prenatal Test To Detect Down Syndrome

By Dianna Cooper
14:47, October 7th 2008
40 votes
Vote this story
Safer Prenatal Test To Detect Down Syndrome

Researchers found a safer method to diagnose Down’s syndrome and several other genetic disorders, a method that at some point may become available by using a genetic test performed on blood samples collected from expectant women.

Pregnant women preoccupied with their babies’ genetic health currently have two possibilities at their disposal: the first one – to get prenatal testing and maybe undergo miscarriage, and the second one – to avoid genetic tests and not be aware of their babies’ such genetic defects before the moment of birth.

Researchers from Stanford University in California and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute created and used a new method able to search for the extra chromosomes that cause Down’s syndrome and other birth defects in the fetal DNA in maternal blood.

This test, a gene-sequencing one, only requires a tiny blood sample from the pregnant woman, compared to amniocentesis, which is performed with a needle inserted through the maternal abdomen into the uterus and amniotic sac. Therefore, one can draw the conclusion that this novel approach is safer that amniocentesis. As stated by the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, about 1 in every 100 expectant women who get an amniocentesis will consequently miscarry.

“We look for chromosomes that are overrepresented,” said study author Stephen Quake, a professor of bioengineering and applied physics at Stanford and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. “The breakthrough is we're able to measure very slight differences very accurately,” he added.

Down syndrome, also called Trisomy 21, is a chromosomal disorder triggered by the presence of all or part of an extra 21st chromosome. Doctors can identify the syndrome during pregnancy or at birth. This genetic birth disorder, the most common one, which causes mental retardation and other problems, occurs in 1 in every 700 infants.

The same test is also able to spot other chromosomal disorders such as Edward syndrome (Trisomy 18), which kills half of babies in the first week of life and those who survive almost always have problems with their heart, lungs and digestive system, and Patau syndrome (Trisomy 13), which usually kills over 80% of children during infanthood. Patau syndrome affects about 1 in every 12,000 live births.

The results of a study of 18 pregnant women and one man for comparison allowed researchers to identify signs of chromosomal disorders. Scientists collected blood samples from the 10 to 35 weeks pregnant women at the Prenatal Diagnostic Center at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital. The new method was used after doctors performed amniocentesis. The findings, which appeared in the online issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, don’t present much precision and reliability; therefore, additional research would have to be done.


With the help of the new approach, researchers diagnosed nine cases of Down’s syndrome, two cases of Edward syndrome and one case of Patau syndrome.

According to Carol Boys, director of the Down's Syndrome Association, "there is no question” that the non-invasive test will be available in a couple of years.



© 2007 - 2009 - eFluxMedia
dotclear

Other News in

Low Blood Oxygen on Everest Proved Another Amazing Human Capability

Low Blood Oxygen on Everest Proved Another Amazing Human Capability

British researchers have found that the established medical rules about the amount of oxygen needed by a body under stress might be wrong. The world-first measurements of blood oxygen levels in...

Exact Results Regarding the Teen Birth Rate Increase

Exact Results Regarding the Teen Birth Rate Increase

According to a report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the teen birth rate increased in more than half of all states in 2006. Back in December 2007, the U.S. Centers for Disease...

Bird Flu Kills Woman In Beijing

Bird Flu Kills Woman In Beijing

Avian influenza has been widely debated in the last years, as it can spread to humans, not only poultry. The H5N1 virus has killed 248 people worldwide since 2003 and scientists are afraid that the...

Wegmans To Offer Free Antibiotics

Wegmans To Offer Free Antibiotics

Starting Tuesday, Wegmans Food Markets offers its customer antibiotics at no charge for a period of three months, aiming to reduce consumer costs at the height of cold and flu season when there...

Deep Brain Stimulation Helps Parkinson’s Patients

Deep Brain Stimulation Helps Parkinson’s Patients

Tuesday, researchers revealed that deep brain stimulation significantly improved Parkinson’s disease symptoms including trembling and slowness of movement, which raises high hopes for all those...

dotclear
Latest videos in Health
Plastic Bags Help to Save...
Nuclear knuckles
Restoring the pee-h balance
Bird flu alert in Hong Kong
Ireland in pork product alert

dotclear
Health You are here: Health
» Science   » Health   
E-mail To A Friend Print RSS Text size: Decrease font size Increase font size
dotclear
dotclear
dotclear
Most Popular in Health
UAMS Scientists To Begin Testing Breast Cancer VaccineUAMS Scientists To Begin Testing Breast Cancer Vaccine

» read full story
dotclear

Interested In This Topic?

News Alert will keep you informed. Find out more.
dotclear
Photos Gallery
dotclear
Today's Latest News
BlackBerry Curve 8900 Available at T-MobileBlackBerry Curve 8900 Available at T-Mobile

» read full story
dotclear