throbber
Reports of Major Impact
`
`www.AJOG.org
`
`Noninvasive detection of fetal trisomy 21 by sequencing
`of DNA in maternal blood: a study in a clinical setting
`
`Mathias Ehrich, MD; Cosmin Deciu, MSc; Tricia Zwiefelhofer; John A. Tynan, DPhil; Lesley Cagasan, MSc; Roger Tim, DPhil;
`Vivian Lu; Ron McCullough, DPhil; Erin McCarthy; Anders O. H. Nygren, DPhil; Jarrod Dean; Lin Tang, DPhil;
`Don Hutchison, MSc; Tim Lu, DPhil; Huiquan Wang, DPhil; Vach Angkachatchai, DPhil; Paul Oeth, MSc;
`Charles R. Cantor, DPhil; Allan Bombard, MD; Dirk van den Boom, DPhil
`
`OBJECTIVE: We sought to evaluate a multiplexed massively parallel
`shotgun sequencing assay for noninvasive trisomy 21 detection using
`circulating cell-free fetal DNA.
`
`STUDY DESIGN: Sample multiplexing and cost-optimized reagents
`were evaluated as improvements to a noninvasive fetal trisomy 21 de-
`tection assay. A total of 480 plasma samples from high-risk pregnant
`women were employed.
`
`RESULTS: In all, 480 prospectively collected samples were obtained
`from our third-party storage site; 13 of these were removed due to in-
`sufficient quantity or quality. Eighteen samples failed prespecified as-
`say quality control parameters. In all, 449 samples remained: 39 tri-
`
`somy 21 samples were correctly classified; 1 sample was misclassified
`as trisomy 21. The overall classification showed 100% sensitivity (95%
`confidence interval, 89 –100%) and 99.7% specificity (95% confi-
`dence interval, 98.5–99.9%).
`
`CONCLUSION: Extending the scope of previous reports, this study dem-
`onstrates that plasma DNA sequencing is a viable method for noninva-
`sive detection of fetal trisomy 21 and warrants clinical validation in a
`larger multicenter study.
`
`Key words: circulating cell-free fetal DNA, massively parallel shotgun
`sequencing, maternal blood, NIPD, noninvasive prenatal diagnosis
`
`Cite this article as: Ehrich M, Deciu C, Zwiefelhofer T, et al. Noninvasive detection of fetal trisomy 21 by sequencing of DNA in maternal blood: a study in a clinical
`setting. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2011;204:205.e1-11.
`
`T risomy 21 is the most common
`
`chromosomal aneuploidy in live
`born infants. The overall incidence of
`trisomy 21 is approximately 1 in 800
`births in the general population,1 but
`this risk increases to 1 in 35 term births
`for women 45 years of age.2-4 Advanced
`maternal age is only one factor contrib-
`uting to increased risk. When other fac-
`tors, such as positive serum screening re-
`sults, fetal ultrasound abnormality, or
`family history are included, the odds of
`being affected given a positive result of
`
`Down syndrome can be as high as 1 in 9
`using the integrated test.5 For women in
`this high-risk group, an invasive diag-
`nostic procedure is currently the only
`way to confirm the diagnosis of trisomy
`21, commonly by means of a fetal karyo-
`type. Although the safety of the invasive
`procedures, specifically genetic amnio-
`centesis and chorionic villus sampling
`(CVS), has improved greatly since their
`introduction, there remains a well-rec-
`
`From Sequenom Inc (Drs Ehrich, Cantor, Bombard, and van den Boom), and Sequenom
`Center for Molecular Medicine LLC (Mr Oeth, Mr Deciu, Ms Zwiefelhofer, Ms Cagasan, Ms
`V. Lu, Ms McCarthy, Mr Dean, Mr Hutchison, and Drs Tynan, Tim, McCullough, Nygren,
`Tang, Lu, Wang, and Angkachatchai), San Diego, CA.
`
`Received Sept. 30, 2010; revised Dec. 28, 2010; accepted Dec. 28, 2010.
`
`Reprints: Dirk van den Boom, DPhil, Sequenom Inc, 3595 John Hopkins Ct., San Diego, CA
`92121. dvandenboom@sequenom.com.
`
`DISCLOSURE: All authors of this article are employees and shareholders of Sequenom, Inc. or its
`subsidiaries, and therefore, a potential conflict of interest exists.
`
`0002-9378/free • © 2011 Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved. • doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2010.12.060
`
`For Editors’ Commentary, see Table of Contents
`
`See related editorial, page 183
`
`ognized risk of iatrogenic fetal loss. Tests
`that could better identify those women
`who would most benefit from confirma-
`tory invasive diagnostic tests are of great
`public health interest. Since the initial
`seminal work by Merkatz et al,6 contin-
`uous efforts have focused on increasing
`the specificity of primary screening
`methods; eg, by including more serum
`protein markers or through the addition
`of ultrasound findings suggestive of fetal
`aneuploidy. Consequently,
`screening
`tests have greatly improved in their clin-
`ical sensitivity and specificity over the
`last 2 decades. These developments have
`also led to contemporary testing pro-
`grams involving a variety of potential
`screening algorithms.7 Accurate gesta-
`tional dating through ultrasound is a
`critical element to achieve high accuracy,
`but may not be readily available to all
`pregnant women.
`A new approach to detect fetal aneu-
`ploidy analyzes fetal DNA itself rather
`than the surrogate biochemical or ultra-
`sound markers in current maternal se-
`rum screening protocols. In 1997, Lo et
`al8 reported that circulating cell-free
`(ccf) fetal (ccff) DNA is present in the
`plasma of pregnant women. DNA of fetal
`
`MARCH 2011 American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology 205.e1
`
`00001
`
`EX1057
`
`

`

`Reports of Major Impact
`
`www.AJOG.org
`
`origin ranges between 2% and 40% with
`a mean around 10% of the total ccf DNA
`across varying gestational ages.9-12 The
`ccff DNA is cleared from the maternal
`bloodstream within hours after birth;
`thus, misdiagnosis from carryover con-
`tamination from a previous pregnancy is
`unlikely.13 A noninvasive ccff method
`for prenatal Rhesus D testing in Europe
`has already been widely adopted.14
`In comparison to Rhesus D testing, an-
`euploidy detection from ccf DNA is far
`more challenging. In principle, aneuploidy
`detection could be enabled through a vari-
`ety of methods including the analysis of
`single nucleotide polymorphisms,15 DNA
`methylation,16,17 or fetally expressed RNA
`transcripts.18,19 The most convincing data
`to date for a generally applicable test, how-
`ever, have been generated through mas-
`sively parallel shotgun sequencing (MPSS)
`of ccf DNA. Two groups have indepen-
`dently shown that MPSS can unambigu-
`ously identify plasma samples
`from
`women carrying a trisomy 21 fetus20-23
`compared to samples from women with
`euploid fetuses. These studies were per-
`formed with small numbers of clinical
`samples and, while these preliminary re-
`sults are very promising, the true clinical
`performance remains to be established. As
`originally described in 2008, the overall
`cost of a sequencing-based test was prohib-
`itive in terms of potential deployment in
`clinical practice. However, next-genera-
`tion sequencing methods such as MPSS
`are rapidly evolving with concomitant de-
`clines in reagent and instrument costs.
`We have implemented several process
`improvements in MPSS for noninvasive
`aneuploidy detection using ccf DNA.
`These modifications provide an afford-
`able testing procedure with the potential
`for widespread utilization. Because such
`a test, first and foremost, has to be safe
`and efficacious we designed a blinded
`study that tested a total of 480 plasma
`samples collected from pregnant woman
`at high risk for fetal aneuploidy.
`
`M A T E R I A L S AND M E THOD S
`Study design
`The study was set up to include at least 40
`trisomy 21 samples, a design chosen to
`achieve a lower 95% confidence bound
`
`of 91% when all trisomy 21 cases are cor-
`rectly identified. We matched trisomy 21
`samples with euploid samples at a ⬃1:11
`ratio, slightly higher than the more typi-
`cal prevalence in a high-risk group of 1
`in 15.
`Patients at increased risk for fetal
`Down syndrome and other chromo-
`somal aneuploidies were asked to partic-
`ipate in this prospective study. Risks in-
`cluded a positive serum biochemical
`screening test; advanced maternal age
`(ⱖ35 years at the estimated date of deliv-
`ery); a fetal ultrasound finding sugges-
`tive of Down syndrome; or a personal/
`family history of Down syndrome.
`Patient informed consent was obtained
`for peripheral blood sampling and for
`the inclusion of karyotype results from
`an already scheduled, subsequent inva-
`sive diagnostic procedure. Fetal karyo-
`types or quantitative fluorescent PCR re-
`sults were obtained as part of regular
`clinical care on either CVS or genetic
`amniocentesis samples. These data were
`unknown to the investigators prior to
`unblinding. The sample demographics
`were representative for pregnant women
`at high risk for fetal trisomy 21 (Table 1).
`Samples were blinded to the investiga-
`tors and prospectively collected, pro-
`cessed, and stored at an independent,
`contracted, third-party location (Bio-
`storage Technologies Inc [BST], Indian-
`apolis, IN). All information was kept
`within an independent, third-party data-
`base (Pharmaceutical Research Associ-
`ates Inc [PRA], Raleigh, NC). A total of
`480 samples were requested from PRA
`and provided by BST for analysis at Se-
`quenom Center for Molecular Medicine,
`San Diego, CA. Karyotype results were
`unknown to the investigators and data
`analysts until after completion of all
`sample testing and submission for re-
`view. The MPSS results were sent to an
`independent, third-party biostatistician
`who had all clinical information includ-
`ing confirmatory karyotypes. The data
`were matched and unblinded by this
`third-party biostatistician and the con-
`cordance of the results was reported.
`
`Sample collection
`For the study presented here, samples
`were collected at clinical practices active
`
`in the treatment of patients undergoing
`invasive prenatal diagnosis by CVS (first
`trimester) and genetic amniocentesis
`(second trimester) and, for some of the
`cases, from pregnancy termination cen-
`ters. Eight samples were collected for
`research purposes under Food and Drug
`Administration approval (FDA Estab-
`lishment Identifier no. 3005208435). All
`remaining samples were collected under
`institutional review board (IRB) ap-
`proval (Western Institutional Review
`Board [WIRB] no. 20091396, WIRB no.
`20080757, Compass IRB no. 00351). All
`samples, demographics, and karyotype
`results were completely blinded to the
`laboratory investigators by the third-
`party clinical
`research organization
`(PRA) and the BST facility. Patients were
`approached during their genetic coun-
`seling sessions and, if they gave their
`informed consent, the study protocol
`dictated that phlebotomy was to be per-
`formed prior to their invasive procedure.
`The vast majority of samples were col-
`lected after August 2009 and none were
`collected before May 2009; therefore, the
`oldest samples in the study were ⬃10
`months old. Samples were all collected at
`specifically contracted processing cen-
`ters operating under study-specific pro-
`tocols. None of the samples were ob-
`tained and analyzed as fresh samples; ie,
`all were processed and frozen before
`shipment to the central, independent
`biostorage
`facility (http://biostorage-
`.com/; a full description of the indepen-
`dent nature of this widely used biostor-
`age company is detailed on their World
`Wide Web site).
`All samples were collected and pro-
`cessed under the same protocol: 10 mL of
`maternal whole blood was drawn into an
`EDTA-K2 spray-dried Vacutainer (Bec-
`ton Dickinson, Franklin Lakes, NJ),
`stored, and transported to the processing
`laboratory on wet ice. Within 6 hours of
`the blood draw, the maternal whole
`blood was
`centrifuged (Eppendorf
`5810R plus swing out rotor) chilled
`(4°C) at 2500g for 10 minutes and the
`plasma was collected. The plasma was
`centrifuged a second time (Eppendorf
`5810R plus fixed angle rotor) at 4°C at
`15,000g for 10 minutes. After the second
`spin, the plasma was removed from the
`
`205.e2 American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology MARCH 2011
`
`00002
`
`

`

`www.AJOG.org
`
`Reports of Major Impact
`
`pellet that formed at the bottom of the
`tube and distributed into 4-mL plasma
`bar-coded aliquots. In this study, only a
`single 4-mL plasma aliquot from each
`patient was used for DNA isolation.
`
`MPSS aneuploidy detection
`DNA was prepared from 4 mL of mater-
`nal plasma. The short lengths of ccf DNA
`afford direct use in preparing the librar-
`ies of DNA fragments that were se-
`quenced. In practice, 4 different libraries
`each containing a synthetic oligonucleo-
`tide sequence as a bar code were mixed
`and analyzed together (multiplexing).
`The bar code revealed which library each
`sequence read represented. Eight sepa-
`rate mixtures of 4 libraries were analyzed
`in parallel. One MPSS process required
`about 2 days and yielded 36 bases of se-
`quence from each DNA fragment. Ap-
`proximately 5 million 36-base fragments
`were sequenced from each library. These
`represented about 6% of the human ge-
`nome in each sample. As is standard in
`MPSS, the 36-base reads were processed
`to exclude poor-quality data and then
`matched to a reference human genome
`to determine their chromosome origin.
`The fraction of reads is proportionate to
`chromosome size. Thus, typically 8.5%
`of all reads are from chromosome 1,
`while only about 1.2% are from chromo-
`some 22.20,21
`A fetus with trisomy 21 contributes
`additional genetic material to the total
`pool of ccf DNA. Consequently, in com-
`parison to women carrying a euploid fe-
`tus, a slightly larger contribution of se-
`quence reads mapping to chromosome
`21 is observed in a plasma sample of a
`woman carrying a fetus with Down syn-
`drome. Ccf DNA in plasma from a preg-
`nant woman with a euploid fetus shows
`an average 1.35% of all aligned sequence
`reads located on chromosome 21. A va-
`riety of analytical methods have been
`published to detect an overabundance of
`genetic material from chromosome 21 in
`trisomic pregnancies.20,21,23 These use
`some form of normalization to calibrate
`the results against a known set of euploid
`reference samples. Contributions greater
`than the reference range are then indica-
`tive of additional genetic material from
`chromosome 21 and in many cases can
`
`be interpreted as a fetal trisomy 21. In
`this study, a modification of a method
`used by Chiu et al20 was used for classi-
`fication. Prior to the main study a set of
`known euploid reference samples was
`used to calculate the mean and standard
`deviation (SD) of the representation of
`chromosome 21 (percentage of reads ob-
`tained from chromosome 21). Then, for
`every test sample, the distance, measured
`in SD, from the mean in the euploid ref-
`erence set was calculated. A fixed cutoff
`of 2.5 SD was used to identify samples
`with an overrepresentation of chromo-
`some 21 material.
`
`Assay design
`Compared to previously published stud-
`ies,20,21 3 important modifications were
`made to the sequencing protocol. We
`used custom purified enzymes in the li-
`brary generation process to achieve a re-
`duction in assay cost. We employed the
`latest sequencing biochemistry available
`for the GAIIx sequencer (Illumina Inc,
`San Diego, CA) in combination with
`the manufacturer’s analysis
`software
`CASAVA version 1.6. These changes in-
`creased the number of sequence reads
`from approximately 13 to 20 million per
`lane. We also used indexing primers dur-
`ing library amplification to allow analy-
`sis of multiple samples in a single se-
`quencing reaction (“multiplexing” vs
`“monoplexing”). In this study, 4 samples
`were analyzed per lane (“4-plex” or “tet-
`raplexing”), which equates to approxi-
`mately 3 to 5 million available sequence
`reads per sample. The combination of
`these modifications enabled 4 times
`higher throughput at about 4 times
`lower cost.
`
`DNA extraction
`The Qiagen ccf nucleic acid kit (Qiagen,
`Hilden, Germany) was used according to
`the manufacturer’s specifications. The
`resulting DNA was eluted in 55 ␮L of
`buffer AVE (part of the Qiagen kit).
`
`Quality control of extracted DNA
`The quantity of the extracted DNA was
`determined with an assay that uses si-
`multaneous quantification of fetal and
`total ccf DNA. This fetal quantifier assay
`(FQA) was recently published10 and uses
`methylation-sensitive
`restriction en-
`
`zymes to eliminate the maternal contri-
`bution of genomic regions that are
`methylated in fetal DNA and unmethyl-
`ated in maternal DNA. The remaining
`nondigested fetal DNA is coamplified in
`the presence of a known amount of syn-
`thetic oligonucleotide to permit compet-
`itive polymerase chain reaction (PCR).
`This synthetic oligonucleotide has an
`identical sequence to the target genomic
`DNA, apart from 1 nucleotide that can
`be targeted by single-base extension and
`quantitative matrix-assisted laser de-
`sorption/ionization time-of-flight mass
`spectrometric analysis. To ensure accu-
`rate results, the assay comprises multiple
`markers in 4 different categories. Three
`markers are used to measure total DNA
`amounts. Three markers are used to
`measure chromosome Y copy numbers;
`2 markers interrogate the efficiency of
`the methylation-specific digestion reac-
`tion, and 5 markers are used to measure
`fetal DNA amounts.
`Methylation-based DNA discrimina-
`tion was performed using 10 ␮L of eluted
`DNA per reaction. All reagents and ap-
`paratus were obtained from Sequenom
`Inc, San Diego, CA, unless stated other-
`wise. Digestion of plasma DNA was per-
`formed for 30 minutes at 41°C by adding
`25 ␮L of a mixture containing 3.5X PCR
`buffer, 2.22 mmol/L MgCl2, 10 U HhaI
`(New England Biolabs, Ipswich, MA), 10
`U HpaII (New England Biolabs), and 10
`U ExoI (New England Biolabs). Exonu-
`clease was added to eliminate single-
`stranded DNA that would escape diges-
`tion and overestimate the fetal fraction.
`After the restriction was complete, the
`enzymes were inactivated and the DNA
`denatured by heating the mixture for 10
`minutes at 98°C. All steps following the
`restriction reaction were performed ac-
`cording to Nygren et al.10
`
`Library preparation
`The extracted ccf DNA was used for li-
`brary preparation without further frag-
`mentation or size selection, because ccf
`DNA is already naturally fragmented,
`having an average length of approxi-
`mately 160 base pairs. Low binding Ep-
`pendorf tubes were used to store 55 ␮L of
`DNA eluent at 4°C following extraction
`until the library preparation had started.
`
`MARCH 2011 American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology 205.e3
`
`00003
`
`

`

`Reports of Major Impact
`
`www.AJOG.org
`
`FIGURE 2
`Robust versus externally
`referenced z-scores
`
`20
`
`15
`
`10
`
`5
`
`0
`
`0
`
`5
`
`10
`
`15
`
`20
`
`Relationship between z-scores calculated based
`on 24 external samples using mean and SD (x-
`axis) and using median and median absolute de-
`viation (y-axis). The blue line indicates the em-
`pirically derived z-score cutoff of 2.5, which is
`comparable to the cutoff of 3 (red line) using the
`robust method.
`Ehrich. Noninvasive detection of fetal trisomy 21. Am J
`Obstet Gynecol 2011.
`
`was mixed with 1X Phusion MM, Illu-
`mina Inc PE 1.0 and 2.0 primers, and 1 of
`12 index primers for a total PCR reaction
`volume of 50 ␮L. The sample was ampli-
`fied in a 0.65-mL PCR tube using a MJ
`Research (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA)
`Model PTC-200 thermal cycler. The
`PCR conditions were an initial denatur-
`ation at 98°C for 30 seconds, 15 cycles of
`denaturation at 98°C for 10 seconds, an-
`nealing at 65°C for 30 seconds, and ex-
`tension at 72°C for 30 seconds. A final
`extension at 72°C for 5 minutes was fol-
`lowed by a 4°C hold. The PCR products
`were cleaned with MinElute columns
`and the libraries eluted in 17 ␮L of EB.
`
`Quality control of generated
`sequencing library
`The libraries were quantified via SYBR
`Green quantitative PCR (qPCR) analysis
`as outlined by Meyer et al.24 Each library
`was diluted 1:108 and quantified against
`a library standard using Power SYBR
`Green PCR Master Mix (ABI, Foster
`City, CA).
`Each sample or standard was assayed
`in triplicate, including triplicate non-
`template control reactions. The sample
`was gently inverted or pipetted up and
`
`FIGURE 1
`Histogram of z-scores calculated using 24 reference samples
`
`0.5
`
`0.4
`
`0.3
`
`0.2
`
`0.1
`
`0.0
`
`Relative frequency
`
`0
`
`5
`
`10
`
`15
`
`A red vertical line is drawn at z ⫽ – 0.6 and corresponds to the median z-score for all samples; its
`expected position, under the assumption that reference samples have same distribution of chromo-
`some 21 representation as all euploid samples in this study, is at z ⫽ 0.
`Ehrich. Noninvasive detection of fetal trisomy 21. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2011.
`
`Storage times ranged from 24-72 hours.
`The library preparation was carried out
`according to the manufacturer’s specifi-
`cations (Illumina Inc) with some modi-
`fications. Enzymes and buffers were
`sourced from Enzymatics (End Repair
`Mix –LC; dNTP Mix [25 mmol/L each];
`Exo(-) Klenow polymerase; 10X Blue
`Buffer; 100 mmol/L dATP; T4 DNA Li-
`gase; 2X Rapid Ligation Buffer) and
`New England Biolabs (Phusion MM).
`Adapter oligonucleotides, indexing oli-
`gonucleotides, and PCR primers were
`obtained from Illumina Inc.
`Library preparation was initiated by
`taking 40 ␮L of ccf DNA for end repair,
`retaining 15 ␮L for QC by FQA. End re-
`pair was performed with a final concen-
`tration of 1X End Repair buffer, 24.5
`␮mol/L each dNTPs, and 1 ␮L of End
`Repair enzyme mix. The end repair reac-
`tion was carried out at room tempera-
`
`ture for 30 minutes and the products
`were cleaned with Qiagen Qiaquick col-
`umns, eluting in 36 ␮L of elution buffer
`(EB). 3= mono-adenylation of the end-
`repaired sample was performed by mix-
`ing it with a final concentration of 1X
`Blue Buffer, 192 ␮mol/L dATP, and 5 U
`of Exo(-) Klenow Polymerase. The reac-
`tion was incubated at 37°C for 30 min-
`utes and cleaned up with Qiagen Min-
`Elute columns, eluting the products in
`14 ␮L of EB. Adapters were ligated to the
`fragments by incubating for 10 minutes
`at room temperature with 1X Rapid Li-
`gation buffer, 48.3 nmol/L Index PE
`Adapter Oligos, and 600 U T4 DNA Li-
`gase. The ligation reaction was cleaned
`up with QiaQuick columns, and the sam-
`ple eluted in 23 ␮L of EB. The adapter-
`modified sample was enriched by ampli-
`fying with a high-fidelity polymerase.
`The entire 23 ␮L eluent of each sample
`
`205.e4 American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology MARCH 2011
`
`00004
`
`

`

`www.AJOG.org
`
`Reports of Major Impact
`
`FIGURE 3
`Distributions of quality control parameters
`
`Unique sequencing counts
`
`Total DNA
`
`0e+00
`
`Relative frequency
`
`0.0e+00
`
`1.0e+07
`
`2.0e+07
`
`3.0e+07
`
`0
`
`5000
`
`10000
`
`15000
`
`Counts
`
`Genome equivalents
`
`Fetal fraction
`
`Library concentration by qPCR
`
`0.00000.00100.00200.0030
`
`Relative frequency
`
`0.0e+00
`
`6
`
`5
`
`4
`
`3
`
`2
`
`1
`
`0
`
`Relative frequency
`
`Relative frequency
`
`0.0
`
`0.1
`
`0.2
`
`0.3
`
`0.4
`
`0.5
`
`0
`
`200
`
`400
`
`600
`
`800
`
`Fetal fraction
`
`nM
`
`Histograms showing distribution of quality control parameters (each histogram has optimal number of
`bins, as calculated with Scott’s rule). Very high values of unique sequence counts (⬎10 million) are
`mainly obtained from samples that were analyzed in monoplex.
`Ehrich. Noninvasive detection of fetal trisomy 21. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2011.
`
`by all sequence reads excluding sequence
`reads from chromosomes X and Y. The
`fractional genomic representation was
`then standardized by subtracting the
`mean of a control group and dividing by
`the standard deviation (SD) of that same
`control group. Using a set of known eu-
`ploid samples as a control group, this
`method determines the distance in SD of
`the tested sample to the mean of the eu-
`ploid reference group. This metric, stan-
`dardized fractional genomic representa-
`tion (the so-called z-scores), is the metric
`used to classify samples as euploid or tri-
`somy 21. Details of this procedure are
`outlined in Chiu et al.20
`Ideally, the standardization process
`would be based on the true mean and
`true SD as calculated from a very large
`set of euploid samples. In the absence
`
`of such a large set, a control group of 24
`euploid samples from a previous ex-
`periment was used. Given both the
`limited sample size and the latent dif-
`ferences between the 2 different exper-
`iments, this control group may pro-
`duce biased estimates of the true mean
`and true SD. In the design of the cur-
`rent study, similar to an expected clin-
`ical setting, it was anticipated that the
`majority of the samples would be eu-
`ploid. Therefore the distribution of the
`z-scores should have a large normally
`distributed component centered on 0
`and with SD close to 1. Any significant
`departure from this situation would be
`an indicator of improper standardiza-
`tion. Alternatively, a robust standard-
`ization can be employed given the data
`from the current experiment, by using
`
`MARCH 2011 American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology 205.e5
`
`down to mix, then spun down. In the re-
`action 2 ␮L of the 1:108 dilution are
`added to a reaction mix containing 9 ␮L
`of Ultrapure Water, 12.5 ␮L 2x Power
`Mix, 0.5 ␮L of each forward (GAT ACG
`GCG ACC ACC GAG AT) and reverse
`(CAA GCA GAA GAC GGC ATA CGA
`G) primer at 10 ␮mol/L, and 0.5 ␮L of 1
`U/␮L uracil-N-glycosylase. Amplifica-
`tion was performed on an ABI 7500 (Ap-
`plied Biosystem, Foster City, CA). The
`cycling protocol began with a 2-minute
`uracil-N-glycosylase decontamination
`step at 50°C, this was followed by Hot-
`Start activation 95°C for 10 minutes. The
`program cycling was commenced and
`continued through 46 cycles of 15 sec-
`onds denaturation at 95°C followed by 1
`minute of annealing/extension at 60°C.
`The final step was a 15-second denatur-
`ation at 95°C.
`
`Clustering and sequencing
`Clustering and sequencing were per-
`formed according to standard Illumina
`Inc protocols. Individual libraries were
`normalized to a 5-nmol/L concentration
`and then clustered in 4-plex format to a
`final flow cell loading concentration of
`1.75 pmol/L per sample or 7 pmol/L per
`flow cell lane. The cBOT instrument and
`v4 Single-Read cBOT reagent kit (Illu-
`mina Inc) were used. Thirty-six cycles
`of single-read multiplexed sequencing
`were performed on the Genome Ana-
`lyzer IIx with Paired-End module using
`v4 SBS reagent kits and supplemental
`Multiplex Sequencing Primer kits (Illu-
`mina Inc). Image analysis and base call-
`ing were performed with RTA1.6/SCS2.6
`software (Illumina Inc). Sequences were
`aligned to the UCSC hg19 human refer-
`ence genome (nonrepeat-masked) using
`CASAVA version 1.6 (Illumina Inc).
`
`Data analysis
`Sequence reads unique to a chromosome
`were counted, up to 1 mismatch (U1
`counts), and the chromosome 21-spe-
`cific genomic representation was calcu-
`lated based on these unique sequence
`reads. The fractional genomic represen-
`tation of chromosome 21 (also referred
`to as the percentage of chromosome 21)
`was determined by dividing the number
`of sequence reads from chromosome 21
`
`00005
`
`

`

`Reports of Major Impact
`
`www.AJOG.org
`
`TABLE 1
`Demographics of 449 analyzed samples
`
`Demographic
`
`Median
`
`Range
`
`(18–47)
`37
`Maternal age, y (n ⫽ 448)
`..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
`Gestational age, wk (n ⫽ 448)
`16
`(8–36)
`..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
`Maternal weight, lb (n ⫽ 425)
`153
`(96–314)
`..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
`Variable
`Percent
`(Naffected/Ntotal)
`..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
`Indication for testinga
`.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
`Positive serum screening
`30.2
`(133/441)
`.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
`Advanced maternal age
`68.3
`(306/448)
`.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
`Ultrasound abnormality
`12.9
`(57/441)
`.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
`Positive family history
`5.2
`(23/441)
`.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
`Not specified
`10.2
`(45/441)
`..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
`Procedure
`.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
`CVS
`19
`(84/442)
`.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
`Genetic amniocentesis
`81
`(358/442)
`..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
`Confirmation
`.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
`Karyotype
`59.9
`(269/449)
`.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
`FISH
`2.9
`(13/449)
`.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
`Both
`35.6
`(160/449)
`.....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
`QF-PCR
`1.6
`(7/449)
`..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
`For some patients not all information was available. Number of patients used to calculate statistics is indicated for each
`parameter.
`CVS, chorionic villus sampling; FISH, fluorescent in situ hybridization; QF-PCR, quantitative fluorescent polymerase chain
`reaction.
`
`a Some patients had ⬎1 indication.
`
`Ehrich. Noninvasive detection of fetal trisomy 21. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2011.
`
`the median and median absolute devi-
`ation for the calculation of z-scores.
`Twenty-four known euploid sam-
`ples from a previous study were used to
`determine mean and SD of the percent
`of
`chromosome 21 representation
`needed for calculating the z-scores for
`the set of 480 samples. The determina-
`tion of the mean and SD of the distri-
`bution of z-scores was performed by
`applying an iterative censoring ap-
`proach. In each iteration we excluded
`the most extreme values (outside of 3
`SD) and recalculated mean and SD.
`The values for mean and SD ap-
`proached a stable value after 10 itera-
`tions. Using this method, we estimate
`the true mean to be – 0.6 and the SD to
`be 1.03. Based on these values the em-
`pirically derived z-score cutoff was set
`to 2.5 (z-score cutoff ⫽ mean ⫹ 3 SD).
`This distribution of the z-scores is dis-
`played in Figure 1. The z-score cutoff
`
`was derived and applied to the data be-
`fore unblinding.
`We used the same 24 reference sam-
`ples and sequenced them in monoplex
`format. The resulting data were used to
`calculate mean and SD for this monoplex
`reference dataset. For the set of 10 sam-
`ples that were run in monoplex we did
`not have enough data available for an
`equivalent bias estimate. Consequently,
`we applied the same z-score cutoff to the
`entire dataset.
`The empirically derived threshold of
`z ⫽ 2.5 correlates well with the cutoff
`of z ⫽ 3, when z-scores are calculated
`using the rob

This document is available on Docket Alarm but you must sign up to view it.


Or .

Accessing this document will incur an additional charge of $.

After purchase, you can access this document again without charge.

Accept $ Charge
throbber

Still Working On It

This document is taking longer than usual to download. This can happen if we need to contact the court directly to obtain the document and their servers are running slowly.

Give it another minute or two to complete, and then try the refresh button.

throbber

A few More Minutes ... Still Working

It can take up to 5 minutes for us to download a document if the court servers are running slowly.

Thank you for your continued patience.

This document could not be displayed.

We could not find this document within its docket. Please go back to the docket page and check the link. If that does not work, go back to the docket and refresh it to pull the newest information.

Your account does not support viewing this document.

You need a Paid Account to view this document. Click here to change your account type.

Your account does not support viewing this document.

Set your membership status to view this document.

With a Docket Alarm membership, you'll get a whole lot more, including:

  • Up-to-date information for this case.
  • Email alerts whenever there is an update.
  • Full text search for other cases.
  • Get email alerts whenever a new case matches your search.

Become a Member

One Moment Please

The filing “” is large (MB) and is being downloaded.

Please refresh this page in a few minutes to see if the filing has been downloaded. The filing will also be emailed to you when the download completes.

Your document is on its way!

If you do not receive the document in five minutes, contact support at support@docketalarm.com.

Sealed Document

We are unable to display this document, it may be under a court ordered seal.

If you have proper credentials to access the file, you may proceed directly to the court's system using your government issued username and password.


Access Government Site

We are redirecting you
to a mobile optimized page.





Document Unreadable or Corrupt

Refresh this Document
Go to the Docket

We are unable to display this document.

Refresh this Document
Go to the Docket