Prenatal screening for haemoglobin disorders

Prenat Diagn. 1995 Dec;15(13):1275-95. doi: 10.1002/pd.1970151308.

Abstract

The technology has been available to detect carriers of haemoglobin disorders since the late 1960s. Prenatal diagnosis has been available since 1978. First trimester diagnosis by chorionic villus sampling and DNA analysis was introduced in 1982, and subsequent simplifications in DNA technology have made screening, counselling and prenatal diagnosis cost-effective at the community level, in countries at all levels of development. Audit of prenatal diagnosis for haemoglobin disorders in countries which have the resources and infrastructure necessary for genetic population screening (such as the UK and other European countries), has shown that the number of prenatal diagnoses actually performed fall far short of expectation. The demonstration that this reflects failures in delivering information, screening and counselling to the populations at risk, rather than rejection of prenatal diagnosis, shows the importance of placing more emphasis on the organisational and social requirements for genetic population screening. In some countries current attitudes towards abortion exclude provision of prenatal diagnosis within the health service, but in many such cases it has been set up in the private sector. It is also being introduced through combined private and charitable efforts in an increasing number of developing countries, including some with extremely limited health resources: such centres are likely to act as nuclei for emergence of genetics services in these communities. A particularly notable recent achievement is the introduction of prenatal diagnosis in Nigeria, where 1-2% of all children born suffer from sickling disorders.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Developing Countries
  • Female
  • Fetal Diseases / diagnosis*
  • Fetal Diseases / epidemiology
  • Genetic Carrier Screening / methods
  • Genetic Counseling
  • Genetic Testing
  • Global Health
  • Hemoglobinopathies / diagnosis*
  • Hemoglobinopathies / epidemiology
  • Hemoglobinopathies / prevention & control*
  • Humans
  • Mass Screening
  • Population Surveillance
  • Pregnancy
  • Prenatal Diagnosis / methods*