Alldred S Kate, Takwoingi Yemisi, Guo Boliang, Pennant Mary, Deeks Jonathan J, Neilson James P, Alfirevic Zarko
Department of Women's and Children's Health, The University of Liverpool, First Floor, Liverpool Women's NHS Foundation Trust, Crown Street, Liverpool, UK, L8 7SS.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015 Nov 30;2015(11):CD011975. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011975.
Down's syndrome occurs when a person has three, rather than two copies of chromosome 21; or the specific area of chromosome 21 implicated in causing Down's syndrome. It is the commonest congenital cause of mental disability and also leads to numerous metabolic and structural problems. It can be life-threatening, or lead to considerable ill health, although some individuals have only mild problems and can lead relatively normal lives. Having a baby with Down's syndrome is likely to have a significant impact on family life.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. However, no test can predict the severity of problems a person with Down's syndrome will have.
The aim of this review was to estimate and compare the accuracy of first trimester serum markers for the detection of Down's syndrome in the antenatal period, both as individual markers and as combinations of markers. Accuracy is described by the proportion of fetuses with Down's syndrome detected by screening before birth (sensitivity or detection rate) and the proportion of women with a low risk (normal) screening test result who subsequently had a baby unaffected by Down's syndrome (specificity).
We conducted a sensitive and comprehensive literature search of MEDLINE (1980 to 25 August 2011), Embase (1980 to 25 August 2011), BIOSIS via EDINA (1985 to 25 August 2011), CINAHL via OVID (1982 to 25 August 2011), The Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effectiveness (The Cochrane Library 25 August 2011), MEDION (25 August 2011), The Database of Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses in Laboratory Medicine (25 August 2011), The National Research Register (Archived 2007), Health Services Research Projects in Progress database (25 August 2011). We did forward citation searching ISI citation indices, Google Scholar and PubMed 'related articles'. We did not apply a diagnostic test search filter. We also searched reference lists and published review articles.
We included studies in which all women from a given population had one or more index test(s) compared to a reference standard (either chromosomal verification or macroscopic postnatal inspection). Both consecutive series and diagnostic case-control study designs were included. Randomised trials where individuals were randomised to different screening strategies and all verified using a reference standard were also eligible for inclusion. Studies in which test strategies were compared head-to-head either in the same women, or between randomised groups were identified for inclusion in separate comparisons of test strategies. We excluded studies if they included less than five Down's syndrome cases, or more than 20% of participants were not followed up.
We extracted data as test positive or 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 (Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies) criteria. We used hierarchical summary ROC meta-analytical methods or random-effects logistic regression methods to analyse test performance and compare test accuracy as appropriate. Analyses of studies allowing direct and indirect comparisons between tests were undertaken.
We included 56 studies (reported in 68 publications) involving 204,759 pregnancies (including 2113 with Down's syndrome). Studies were generally of good quality, although differential verification was common with invasive testing of only high-risk pregnancies. We evaluated 78 test combinations formed from combinations of 18 different tests, with or without maternal age; ADAM12 (a disintegrin and metalloprotease), AFP (alpha-fetoprotein), inhibin, PAPP-A (pregnancy-associated plasma protein A, ITA (invasive trophoblast antigen), free βhCG (beta human chorionic gonadotrophin), PlGF (placental growth factor), SP1 (Schwangerschafts protein 1), total hCG, progesterone, uE3 (unconjugated oestriol), GHBP (growth hormone binding protein), PGH (placental growth hormone), hyperglycosylated hCG, ProMBP (proform of eosinophil major basic protein), hPL (human placental lactogen), (free αhCG, and free ßhCG to AFP ratio. Direct comparisons between two or more tests were made in 27 studies.Meta-analysis of the nine best performing or frequently evaluated test combinations showed that a test strategy involving maternal age and a double marker combination of PAPP-A and free ßhCG significantly outperformed the individual markers (with or without maternal age) detecting about seven out of every 10 Down's syndrome pregnancies at a 5% false positive rate (FPR). Limited evidence suggested that marker combinations involving PAPP-A may be more sensitive than those without PAPP-A.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Tests involving two markers in combination with maternal age, specifically PAPP-A, free βhCG and maternal age are significantly better than those involving single markers with and without age. They detect seven out of 10 Down's affected pregnancies for a fixed 5% FPR. The addition of further markers (triple tests) has not been shown to be statistically superior; the studies included are small with limited power to detect a difference.The screening blood tests themselves have no adverse effects for the woman, over and above the risks of a routine blood test. However some women who have a 'high risk' screening test result, and are given amniocentesis or chorionic villus sampling (CVS) have a risk of miscarrying a baby unaffected by Down's. Parents will need to weigh up this risk when deciding whether or not to have an amniocentesis or CVS following a 'high risk' screening test result.
当一个人的21号染色体有三条而非两条,或者21号染色体上导致唐氏综合征的特定区域出现异常时,就会发生唐氏综合征。它是导致智力残疾最常见的先天性病因,还会引发众多代谢和结构问题。尽管有些患者只有轻微问题,能够过上相对正常的生活,但唐氏综合征可能危及生命,或导致严重健康问题。生育患有唐氏综合征的婴儿可能会对家庭生活产生重大影响。基于母体血清或尿液生化分析或胎儿超声测量的无创筛查,可以估计妊娠受影响的风险,并为决定是否进行确诊检测提供信息。然而,没有任何检测能够预测唐氏综合征患者可能出现问题的严重程度。
本综述的目的是评估和比较孕早期血清标志物在孕期检测唐氏综合征的准确性,包括单个标志物以及标志物组合。准确性通过出生前筛查出的唐氏综合征胎儿比例(敏感性或检测率)以及筛查结果为低风险(正常)的女性中,其婴儿未受唐氏综合征影响的比例(特异性)来描述。
我们对MEDLINE(1980年至2011年8月25日)、Embase(1980年至2011年8月25日)、通过EDINA检索的BIOSIS(1985年至2011年8月25日)、通过OVID检索的CINAHL(1982年至2011年8月25日)、循证医学数据库(Cochrane图书馆2011年8月25日)、MEDION(2011年8月25日)、检验医学系统评价与Meta分析数据库(2011年8月25日)、国家研究注册库(存档于2007年)、卫生服务研究进展项目数据库(2011年8月25日)进行了全面且敏感的文献检索。我们还通过ISI引文索引、谷歌学术和PubMed的“相关文章”进行了向前引文检索。我们未应用诊断性测试检索过滤器。我们还检索了参考文献列表和已发表的综述文章。
我们纳入了这样的研究,即给定人群中的所有女性都进行了一项或多项指标检测,并与参考标准(染色体验证或产后宏观检查)进行比较。纳入了连续系列研究和诊断性病例对照研究设计。将个体随机分配到不同筛查策略并全部使用参考标准进行验证的随机试验也符合纳入标准。在同一女性中或随机分组之间对测试策略进行直接比较的研究,被纳入单独的测试策略比较。如果研究中唐氏综合征病例少于5例,或者超过20%的参与者未进行随访,我们将其排除。
我们提取的数据为唐氏综合征和非唐氏综合征妊娠的检测阳性或阴性结果,以便估计检测率(敏感性)和假阳性率(1 - 特异性)。我们根据QUADAS(诊断准确性研究质量评估)标准进行质量评估。我们使用分层汇总ROC荟萃分析方法或随机效应逻辑回归方法来分析测试性能,并在适当情况下比较测试准确性。对允许在测试之间进行直接和间接比较的研究进行了分析。
我们纳入了56项研究(发表于68篇出版物),涉及204,759例妊娠(包括2113例唐氏综合征妊娠)。尽管对仅高危妊娠进行侵入性检测时,差异验证很常见,但研究质量总体良好。我们评估了由18种不同测试组合而成的78种测试组合,包括或不包括母亲年龄;ADAM12(一种解整合素和金属蛋白酶)、AFP(甲胎蛋白)、抑制素、PAPP - A(妊娠相关血浆蛋白A)、ITA(侵入性滋养层抗原)、游离βhCG(β人绒毛膜促性腺激素)、PlGF(胎盘生长因子)、SP1(妊娠特异性β1糖蛋白)、总hCG、孕酮、uE3(未结合雌三醇)、GHBP(生长激素结合蛋白)、PGH(胎盘生长激素)、高糖基化hCG、ProMBP(嗜酸性粒细胞主要碱性蛋白前体)、hPL(人胎盘催乳素)、游离αhCG以及游离βhCG与AFP的比值。27项研究对两种或更多测试进行了直接比较。对九种表现最佳或经常评估的测试组合进行的荟萃分析表明,一种涉及母亲年龄以及PAPP - A和游离βhCG双重标志物组合的测试策略,在5%的假阳性率(FPR)下,显著优于单个标志物(包括或不包括母亲年龄),每10例唐氏综合征妊娠中能检测出约7例。有限的证据表明,包含PAPP - A的标志物组合可能比不包含PAPP - A的组合更敏感。
涉及两种标志物与母亲年龄相结合的测试,特别是PAPP - A、游离βhCG和母亲年龄,明显优于涉及单个标志物(无论是否包含年龄)的测试。在固定的5% FPR下,它们能检测出10例受唐氏综合征影响妊娠中的7例。添加更多标志物(三联检测)在统计学上并未显示出更优;纳入的研究规模较小,检测差异的能力有限。筛查血液检测本身对女性没有超出常规血液检测风险的不良影响。然而,一些筛查结果为“高风险”并接受羊膜穿刺术或绒毛取样(CVS)的女性,有流产未受唐氏综合征影响胎儿的风险。父母在决定是否在“高风险”筛查结果后进行羊膜穿刺术或CVS时,需要权衡这种风险。