“…From a socio-demographic and clinical-obstetric point of view, studies with different quality levels unanimously indicate that advanced maternal age (Beulen et al, 2015;Gil et al, 2015;Grinshpun-Cohen et al, 2015a, 2015bSchoonen et al, 2012;Ternby et al, 2015;Watanabe et al, 2017), having a risk for genetic anomalies and previous abortions induce women to undergo prenatal testing, without distinction between invasive or non-invasive test (Chan et al, 2014;Seven et al, 2017;Skutilova, 2015). Similarly, no differences emerge in the use of both invasive and noninvasive prenatal testing in relation to educational level, in particular a higher educational attainment is associated with a greater use of prenatal test in general (Bangsgaard and Tabor, 2013;Beulen et al, 2015;Canh Chuong et al, 2018;Dicke et al, 2014;Farrell et al, 2014;Gil et al, 2015). Only a study with poor methodological quality (Crombag et al, 2016) reports that women with a high level of education are more likely to decline cFTS.…”