Observed and Modeled Positive Predictive Values Using Cell-free DNA Testing for Fetal Trisomy in a Clinical Laboratory Population.

2021 
Introduction The objective of this study was to explore different approaches to communicating the positive predictive value (PPV) of cell-free DNA screening for fetal trisomy. Methods PPV was established for 4 maternal age-groups ( 39 years) from clinical laboratory data and compared to the modeled PPV from an online calculator. In women under 35, PPV was compared between 2 subsets, high risk and low risk, classified based on the diagnosis codes that were provided to the laboratory. Results In 503 high-probability trisomy 21 results, the observed PPVs in the 4 age-groups were 97.0% ( 39), all higher than those from the calculator, which ranged from 53 to 95%. Likewise, PPVs were 77.4-97.0% observed versus 16-78% modeled in 131 trisomy 18 cases and 30.4-80.0% observed versus 6-61% modeled in 80 trisomy 13 cases. In women under 35, PPV for the trisomies combined was 90.4% in the higher-risk group compared to 79.7% in the lower-risk group. Conclusion Modeling PPV based on maternal age will provide an underestimate in a clinical population. Although the PPV is higher for the samples with higher-risk diagnosis codes, the information that accompanies clinical samples is too general to model PPV for a specific patient.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    12
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []