Clinical Validation of a Prenatal Cell-Free DNA Screening Test for Fetal RHD in a Large U.S. Cohort
- PMID: 39591628
- PMCID: PMC11731044
- DOI: 10.1097/AOG.0000000000005794
Clinical Validation of a Prenatal Cell-Free DNA Screening Test for Fetal RHD in a Large U.S. Cohort
Abstract
Objective: To present a large U.S. clinical validation of a next-generation sequencing-based, noninvasive prenatal cell-free DNA test for fetal RHD .
Methods: This clinical validation study assessed the performance of a commercially available, next-generation sequencing-based cell-free DNA test for fetal RHD status. Samples that passed quality metrics were included if the patient had a previously reported cell-free DNA result for fetal aneuploidy, maternal RhD-negative serology, newborn RhD serology, and maternal RHD deletion or RHD-CE-D hybrid(r's) genotype. Dizygotic twin pregnancies were excluded. Maternal and fetal RHD genotypes were evaluated with prospective cell-free DNA next-generation sequencing analysis. At the time of analysis, investigators were blinded to fetal RhD status.
Results: The cohort consisted of 655 pregnant patients with serologic results for RhD antigen. Patient demographics included a representative distribution of race and ethnicities in the RhD-negative U.S. population (74.0% White, 13.7% Hispanic, 7.0% Black, and 2.1% Asian). Cell-free DNA fetal RHD was not reported in two cases. There were zero false-negative cases; 356 of 356 fetuses were correctly identified as fetal RhD positive (sensitivity 100%, 95% CI, 98.9-100%). Of the 297 RhD-negative fetuses, 295 were correctly identified as RhD negative (specificity 99.3%, 95% CI, 97.6-99.8%). Of the fetuses with a negative RhD phenotype, the cell-free DNA test accurately identified three with the fetal RHD pseudogene ( RHDΨ) genotype.
Conclusion: Validation of this test in this large U.S. cohort of RhD-negative patients provides data on early and accurate noninvasive prenatal identification of fetal RHD genotype at 9 weeks of gestation or more. This test has the potential to assist patients and clinicians in the prevention and management of RhD alloimmunization.
Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.
Conflict of interest statement
Financial Disclosure Wenbo Xu, Bridget Moore, Tina Wang, Nicholas Sun, Hemant Pewar, Neil D. Avent, Abelardo Vernaza, Felipe Acosta, Jessica L. Saben, Vivienne Souter, Sheetal Parmar, Urmi Sengupta, Yucel Altug, Joshua EmBree, Carlos Cantos, Chitra Kotwaliwale, Joshua Babiarz, Bernhard Zimmermann, Ryan Swenerton, and Jeffrey T. Meltzer are employees of or consultants to Natera, Inc. with stocks or options to own stocks. Neil D. Advent received payments from Wilmer Hale LLP. Marisa Gilstrop Thompson did not report any potential conflicts of interest.
References
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- Moise KJ, Jr. RhD alloimmunization in pregnancy: overview. Accessed May 6, 2024. https://uptodate.com/contents/rhd-alloimmunization-in-pregnancy-overview
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- de Haas M, Thurik FF, van der Ploeg CP, Veldhuisen B, Hirschberg H, Soussan AA, et al. . Sensitivity of fetal RHD screening for safe guidance of targeted anti-D immunoglobulin prophylaxis: prospective cohort study of a nationwide programme in the Netherlands. BMJ 2016;355:i5789. doi: 10.1136/bmj.i5789 - DOI - PMC - PubMed
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