Back to Search Start Over

Detection of maternal carriers of common α-thalassemia deletions from cell-free DNA.

Authors :
Doan PL
Nguyen DA
Le QT
Hoang DT
Nguyen HD
Nguyen CC
Doan KPT
Tran NT
Ha TMT
Trinh THN
Nguyen VT
Bui CT
Lai NT
Duong TH
Mai HL
Huynh PV
Huynh TTT
Le QV
Vo TB
Dao TH
Vo PA
Le DN
Tran NNT
Tran QNT
Van YT
Tran HT
Nguyen HT
Nguyen PU
Do TT
Truong DK
Tang HS
Cao NT
Lam TT
Tran LS
Nguyen HN
Giang H
Phan MD
Source :
Scientific reports [Sci Rep] 2022 Aug 09; Vol. 12 (1), pp. 13581. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Aug 09.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

α-Thalassemia is a common inherited blood disorder manifested mainly by the deletions of α-globin genes. In geographical areas with high carrier frequencies, screening of α-thalassemia carrier state is therefore of vital importance. This study presents a novel method for identifying female carriers of common α-thalassemia deletions using samples routinely taken for non-invasive prenatal tests for screening of fetal chromosomal aneuploidies. A total of 68,885 Vietnamese pregnant women were recruited and α-thalassemia statuses were determined by gap-PCR, revealing 5344 women (7.76%) carried deletions including αα/-- <superscript>SEA</superscript> (4.066%), αα/-α <superscript>3.7</superscript> (2.934%), αα/-α <superscript>4.2</superscript> (0.656%), and rare genotypes (0.102%). A two-stage model was built to predict these α-thalassemia deletions from targeted sequencing of the HBA gene cluster on maternal cfDNA. Our method achieved F1-scores of 97.14-99.55% for detecting the three common genotypes and 94.74% for detecting rare genotypes (-α <superscript>3.7</superscript> /-α <superscript>4.2</superscript> , αα/-- <superscript>THAI</superscript> , -α <superscript>3.7</superscript> /-- <superscript>SEA</superscript> , -α <superscript>4.2</superscript> /-- <superscript>SEA</superscript> ). Additionally, the positive predictive values were 100.00% for αα/αα, 99.29% for αα/-- <superscript>SEA</superscript> , 94.87% for αα/-α <superscript>3.7</superscript> , and 96.51% for αα/-α <superscript>4.2</superscript> ; and the negative predictive values were 97.63%, 99.99%, 99.99%, and 100.00%, respectively. As NIPT is increasingly adopted for pregnant women, utilizing cfDNA from NIPT to detect maternal carriers of common α-thalassemia deletions will be cost-effective and expand the benefits of NIPT.<br /> (© 2022. The Author(s).)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2045-2322
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Scientific reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35945425
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-17718-7