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British Institute of Radiology, British Journal of Radiology, 862(72), p. 946-948

DOI: 10.1259/bjr.72.862.10673944

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First trimester nuchal translucency: Effective routine screening for Down's syndrome

Journal article published in 1999 by B. Thilaganathan ORCID, S. Sairam, G. Michailidis, N. C. Wathen
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

The objective was to evaluate the effectiveness of 10-14 week nuchal translucency measurement in routine ultrasound screening for Down's syndrome. 11,398 women were scanned at 10-14 weeks of pregnancy for nuchal translucency measurements. The mean maternal age of the screened population was not significantly different from that of the booking population. A 5% screen positive rate was achieved by using a nuchal translucency-derived risk of > or = 1:200. Screening using this nuchal translucency risk would enable the first trimester detection of 16 out of 21 (76%) fetuses with Down's syndrome and 40 out of 49 (81%) aneuploid fetuses. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that first trimester nuchal translucency measurement is an effective method of screening for fetal chromosomal abnormality.