articleNew England Journal of MedicineNov 9, 2005BRONZE OA

First-Trimester or Second-Trimester Screening, or Both, for Down's Syndrome

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland · Columbia University · +13 more institutions

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Abstract

Background

It is uncertain how best to screen pregnant women for the presence of fetal Down's syndrome: to perform first-trimester screening, to perform second-trimester screening, or to use strategies incorporating measurements in both trimesters.

Methods

Women with singleton pregnancies underwent first-trimester combined screening (measurement of nuchal translucency, pregnancy-associated plasma protein A [PAPP-A], and the free beta subunit of human chorionic gonadotropin at 10 weeks 3 days through 13 weeks 6 days of gestation) and second-trimester quadruple screening (measurement of alpha-fetoprotein, total human chorionic gonadotropin, unconjugated estriol, and inhibin A at 15 through 18 weeks of gestation). We compared the results of stepwise sequential screening (risk results provided after each test), fully integrated screening (single risk result provided), and serum integrated screening (identical to fully integrated screening, but without nuchal translucency).

Citation impact

1,078
total citations
FWCI
91.76
Percentile
100%
References
20
Citations per year

Authors

20

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Gestation
  • Obstetrics
  • Human chorionic gonadotropin
  • Pregnancy
  • Nuchal Translucency Measurement
  • Fetus
  • First trimester
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Gender equality
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