Informations générales (source: ClinicalTrials.gov)

NCT06147414 En recrutement IDF
Evaluation of the Diagnostic Performance of Non-Invasive Prenatal Diagnosis for Single Gene Disorders
Observational
  • Drépanocytose
  • Hémophilie B
  • Mucoviscidose
  • Maladie
  • Syndrome du chromosome X fragile
  • Hémophilie A
  • Maladie de Huntington
  • Hydrocéphalie
  • Maladies du rein
  • Polykystoses rénales
  • Amyotrophie
  • Amyotrophie spinale
  • Dystrophies musculaires
  • Dystrophie myotonique
  • Syndrome de Noonan
  • Syndrome
  • Polykystose rénale autosomique récessive
  • Neurofibromatoses
  • Myopathie de Duchenne
Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (Voir sur ClinicalTrials)
octobre 2024
mai 2027
15 septembre 2025
Cell-free fetal DNA (cffDNA) is present in the maternal blood from the early first trimester of gestation and makes up 5%-20% of the total circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) in maternal plasma. Its presence in maternal plasma has allowed development of noninvasive prenatal diagnosis for single-gene disorders (SGD-NIPD). This can be performed from 9 weeks of amenorrhea and offers an early, safe and accurate definitive diagnosis without the miscarriage risk associated with invasive procedures. One of the major difficulties is distinguishing fetal genotype in the high background of maternal cfDNA, which leads to several technical and analytical challenges. Besides, unlike noninvasive prenatal testing for aneuploidy, NIPD for monogenic diseases represent a smaller market opportunity, and many cases must be provided on a bespoke, patient- or disease-specific basis. As a result, implementation of SGD-NIPD remained sparse, with most testing being delivered in a research setting. The present project aims to take advantage of the unique French collaborative network to make SGD-NIPD possible for theoretically any monogenic disorder and any family.
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Etablissements

Critères

Femme
Inclusion Criteria:

- pregnant woman with 9 weeks of amenorrhea or more

- singleton pregnancy

- undergoing invasive PND in a context of family history of SGD involving the
following genes : HBB, CFTR, FMR1, SMN1, DMPK, DMD, NF1, HTT, F8, F9, GCK, L1CAM,
PKHD1, ATP7A or undergoing prenatal counselling in a context of maternal history of
diabetes MODY-GCK

- germinal pathogenic paternal and/or maternal mutations previously identified

- age 18 years old or over

- signing an informed consent



- at risk of another SGD

- at risk of SGD involving a de novo pathogenic mutation in a previous child

- woman under legal protection