Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01925742

Study of the Efficacy of New Non-invasive Prenatal Tests for Screening for Fetal Trisomies Using Maternal Blood

PEGASUS: PErsonalized Genomics for Prenatal Aneuploidy Screening USing Maternal Blood

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
3,819 (actual)
Sponsor
CHU de Quebec-Universite Laval · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
19 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Each year, 450,000 Canadian women become pregnant and, as a result of their participation in prenatal screening for Down syndrome, approximately 10,000 of them will have an amniocentesis (i.e. sampling of liquid surrounding the fetus) and of those, 315 will be found to carry a baby with Down syndrome and 70 normal pregnancies will be lost from complications of the procedure. It has been discovered recently that, during pregnancy, there is fetal DNA in maternal blood in sufficient quantities to be analysed and methods have been proposed to detect the presence or not of a fetus with Down syndrome using maternal blood. The introduction of genomic blood testing as proposed in the context of this project could lead to increased detection of Down syndrome, less invasive screening with 9700 amniocentesis avoided each year in Canada, improving the peace of mind of pregnant women, and preventing the accidental loss of 70 normal fetuses, at a lower overall cost than current practice. However, these methods still need to be validated before being appropriately introduced in routine care. The study hypothesis is that new genomics-based non-invasive methods using fetal-DNA in maternal blood during pregnancy can be more effective than current prenatal screening methods for fetal aneuploidy. This project will carry out an independent study that will validate the performance and utility of different new genomic technologies for screening in pregnant women using maternal blood. The team of researchers will compare the real-life performance of different non-invasive assays and strategies to screen for fetal aneuploidy, and identify an evidence-based cost-effective approach for implementation of this new technology in the Canadian health care system. The deliverables of this project will enable decision makers, pregnant women and their partner to make informed choices pertaining to prenatal genetic screening and diagnosis, such as screening for Down syndrome, and reduce the risk to pregnancies associated with amniocentesis.

Detailed description

The present study is a real life comparative effectiveness study that will compare the performances and costs of several prenatal screening modalities for fetal aneuploidy (see interventions).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERIntegrated prenatal screening for Down's syndromeAnalysis of several serum biochemical markers, and fetal nuchal translucency by ultrasound, with computation of an individual risk of fetal aneuploidy.
OTHERSerum QUAD Assay for aneuploidy screeningSeries of biochemical markers with results integrated into a computational estimate of risk of fetal aneuploidy
OTHERSemiconductor MPSS NIPT assay using ccfDNA in maternal bloodAnalysis by next-generation sequencing of ccfDNA (circulating cell-free DNA) from maternal blood, using a targeted NIPT assay.
OTHEROptical-based MPSS NIPT assay using ccfDNA in maternal bloodAnalysis by next-generation sequencing of ccfDNA (circulating cell-free DNA) from maternal blood, using an un-targeted NIPT assay.
OTHERHarmony™ Test (Ariosa Diagnostics)Test that is commercially available (Ariosa Diagnostics). (will be used for benchmarking purposes in a subset of each arm)

Timeline

Start date
2013-11-01
Primary completion
2017-06-01
Completion
2017-06-01
First posted
2013-08-20
Last updated
2018-02-22

Locations

5 sites across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01925742. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.