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- Title
Noninvasive prenatal diagnosis of Mendelian disorders for consanguineous couples by relative genotype dosage.
- Authors
Fokstuen, Siv; Quteineh, Lina; Schwitzgebel, Valérie M.; Köhler‐Ballan, Bettina; Blouin, Jean‐Louis; Abramowicz, Marc; Nouspikel, Thierry
- Abstract
Noninvasive prenatal diagnosis relies on the presence in maternal blood of circulating cell‐free fetal DNA released by apoptotic trophoblast cells. Widely used for aneuploidy screening, it can also be applied to monogenic diseases (NIPD‐M) in case of known parental mutations. Due to the confounding effect of maternal DNA, detection of maternal or biparental mutations requires relative haplotype dosage (RHDO), a method relying on the presence of SNPs that are heterozygous in one parent and homozygous in the other. Unavoidably, there is a risk of test failure by lack of such informative SNPs, an event particularly likely for consanguineous couples who often share common haplotypes in regions of identity‐by‐descent. Here we present a novel approach, relative genotype dosage (RGDO) that bypasses this predicament by directly assessing fetal genotype with SNPs that are heterozygous in both parents (frequent in regions of identity‐by‐descent). We show that RGDO is as sensitive as RHDO and that it performs well over a large range of fetal fractions and DNA amounts, thereby opening NIPD‐M to most consanguineous couples. We also report examples of couples, consanguineous or not, where combining RGDO and RHDO allowed a diagnosis that would not have been possible with only one approach.
- Subjects
NONINVASIVE diagnostic tests; PRENATAL diagnosis; CELL-free DNA; GENOTYPES; HAPLOTYPES; FETUS
- Publication
Clinical Genetics, 2023, Vol 104, Issue 5, p505
- ISSN
0009-9163
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/cge.14399