Alldred S Kate, Deeks Jonathan J, Guo Boliang, Neilson James P, Alfirevic Zarko
Department of Women’s and Children’s Health, The University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2012 Jun 13;2012(6):CD009925. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD009925.
Down's syndrome occurs when a person has three copies of chromosome 21 - or the specific area of chromosome 21 implicated in causing Down's syndrome - rather than two. It is the commonest congenital cause of mental retardation. Noninvasive screening based on biochemical analysis of maternal serum or urine, or fetal ultrasound measurements, allows estimates of the risk of a pregnancy being affected and provides information to guide decisions about definitive testing.
To estimate and compare the accuracy of second trimester serum markers for the detection of Down's syndrome.
We carried out a sensitive and comprehensive literature search of MEDLINE (1980 to May 2007), EMBASE (1980 to 18 May 2007), BIOSIS via EDINA (1985 to 18 May 2007), CINAHL via OVID (1982 to 18 May 2007), The Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effectiveness (The Cochrane Library 2007, Issue 1), MEDION (May 2007), The Database of Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses in Laboratory Medicine (May 2007), The National Research Register (May 2007), Health Services Research Projects in Progress database (May 2007). We studied reference lists and published review articles.
Studies evaluating tests of maternal serum in women at 14-24 weeks of gestation for Down's syndrome, compared with a reference standard, either chromosomal verification or macroscopic postnatal inspection.
Data were extracted as test positive/test negative results for Down's and non-Down's pregnancies allowing estimation of detection rates (sensitivity) and false positive rates (1-specificity). We performed quality assessment according to QUADAS criteria. We used hierarchical summary ROC meta-analytical methods to analyse test performance and compare test accuracy. Analysis of studies allowing direct comparison between tests was undertaken. We investigated the impact of maternal age on test performance in subgroup analyses.
Fifty-nine studies involving 341,261 pregnancies (including 1,994 with Down's syndrome) were included. Studies were generally high quality, although differential verification was common with invasive testing of only high-risk pregnancies. Seventeen studies made direct comparisons between tests. Fifty-four test combinations were evaluated formed from combinations of 12 different tests and maternal age; alpha-fetoprotein (AFP), unconjugated oestriol (uE3), total human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG), free beta human chorionic gonadotrophin (βhCG), free alpha human chorionic gonadotrophin (αhCG), Inhibin A, SP2, CA125, troponin, pregnancy-associated plasma protein A (PAPP-A), placental growth factor (PGF) and proform of eosinophil major basic protein (ProMBP).Meta-analysis of 12 best performing or frequently evaluated test combinations showed double and triple tests (involving AFP, uE3, total hCG, free βhCG) significantly outperform individual markers, detecting six to seven out of every 10 Down's syndrome pregnancies at a 5% false positive rate. Tests additionally involving inhibin performed best (eight out of every 10 Down's syndrome pregnancies) but were not shown to be significantly better than standard triple tests in direct comparisons. Significantly lower sensitivity occurred in women over the age of 35 years. Women who miscarried in the over 35 group were more likely to have been offered an invasive test to verify a negative screening results, whereas those under 35 were usually not offered invasive testing for a negative screening result. Pregnancy loss in women under 35 therefore leads to under ascertainment of screening results, potentially missing a proportion of affected pregnancies and affecting the accuracy of the sensitivity.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Tests involving two or more markers in combination with maternal age are significantly more sensitive than those involving one marker. The value of combining four or more tests or including inhibin have not been proven to show statistically significant improvement. Further study is required to investigate reduced test performance in women aged over 35 and the impact of differential pregnancy loss on study findings.
当一个人拥有三条21号染色体——或者21号染色体中与导致唐氏综合征相关的特定区域——而非两条时,就会发生唐氏综合征。它是智力迟钝最常见的先天性病因。基于孕妇血清或尿液生化分析或胎儿超声测量的无创筛查,能够估计妊娠受影响的风险,并提供信息以指导关于确定性检测的决策。
估计并比较孕中期血清标志物检测唐氏综合征的准确性。
我们对MEDLINE(1980年至2007年5月)、EMBASE(1980年至2007年5月18日)、通过EDINA检索的BIOSIS(1985年至2007年5月18日)、通过OVID检索的CINAHL(1982年至2007年5月18日)、循证医学数据库(考克兰图书馆2007年第1期)、MEDION(2007年5月)、检验医学系统评价与Meta分析数据库(2007年5月)、国家研究注册库(2007年5月)、卫生服务研究进展项目数据库(2007年5月)进行了全面且敏感的文献检索。我们查阅了参考文献列表及已发表的综述文章。
评估妊娠14 - 24周孕妇血清检测唐氏综合征的研究,并与参考标准(染色体验证或产后宏观检查)进行比较。
提取唐氏综合征和非唐氏综合征妊娠的检测阳性/检测阴性结果数据,以估计检出率(敏感性)和假阳性率(1 - 特异性)。我们根据QUADAS标准进行质量评估。我们使用分层汇总ROC荟萃分析方法分析检测性能并比较检测准确性。对允许直接比较不同检测方法的研究进行了分析。我们在亚组分析中研究了孕妇年龄对检测性能的影响。
纳入了59项研究,涉及341,261例妊娠(包括1,994例唐氏综合征妊娠)。研究质量总体较高,不过仅对高危妊娠进行侵入性检测时,差异验证较为常见。17项研究对不同检测方法进行了直接比较。评估了由12种不同检测方法与孕妇年龄组合形成的54种检测组合;甲胎蛋白(AFP)、未结合雌三醇(uE3)、总人绒毛膜促性腺激素(hCG)、游离β人绒毛膜促性腺激素(βhCG)、游离α人绒毛膜促性腺激素(αhCG)、抑制素A、SP2、CA125、肌钙蛋白、妊娠相关血浆蛋白A(PAPP - A)、胎盘生长因子(PGF)和嗜酸性粒细胞主要碱性蛋白前体(ProMBP)。对12种表现最佳或经常评估的检测组合进行的荟萃分析表明,双联和三联检测(涉及AFP、uE3、总hCG、游离βhCG)明显优于单个标志物,在5%的假阳性率下,每10例唐氏综合征妊娠中能检测出6至7例。额外涉及抑制素的检测表现最佳(每10例唐氏综合征妊娠中能检测出8例),但在直接比较中未显示出明显优于标准三联检测。35岁以上女性的敏感性显著降低。35岁以上组中流产的女性更有可能接受侵入性检测以验证阴性筛查结果,而35岁以下的女性通常不会因阴性筛查结果而接受侵入性检测。因此,35岁以下女性的妊娠丢失导致筛查结果确定不足,可能遗漏一部分受影响的妊娠,进而影响敏感性的准确性。
涉及两种或更多标志物并结合孕妇年龄的检测方法比涉及单个标志物的方法敏感性显著更高。联合四种或更多检测方法或纳入抑制素的价值尚未被证明有统计学上的显著改善。需要进一步研究以调查35岁以上女性检测性能降低的情况以及不同妊娠丢失对研究结果的影响。