A new policy for prenatal screening and diagnosis of Down syndrome for pregnant women with advanced maternal age in a public hospital.

2010 
Objective. Before April 2006, women with singleton pregnancy and advanced maternal age (AMA, 35 years and older) were offered either direct invasive tests or a variety of screening tests for Down syndrome (DS) with routine anomaly scan at 18–20 weeks. After April 2006, to reduce procedure-related fetal loss, invasive test was performed only for positive screening result or the presence of major fetal anomaly on ultrasound. We reviewed our 2-year experience after the policy change.Methods. Two-year data after policy change were compared to the 1-year historic control before policy change.Results. A total of 2257 eligible women were counselled in the 2 years after policy change. The uptake of screening was 96.7%. The overall detection rate for DS was 90% (18/20) at a false positive rate of 10.9%. The number of invasive tests performed to diagnose one case of DS was reduced 7-fold from 97 to 13.Conclusions. The number of direct invasive tests was markedly reduced. With effective DS screening policy, it is po...
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