2012
DOI: 10.1038/jp.2012.8
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Utilization of available prenatal screening and diagnosis: effects of the California screen program

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Cited by 5 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Other tools reported in a few studies were screening tests (i.e., 1st or 2nd trimester prenatal tests, screening test for FH), medical records, death certificates, cancer registry, telephone counseling and physician referral letters. Family history collection and risk assessment were mostly performed in programs providing BRCA1/2 (52/59 programs), Lynch syndrome (21/23 programs) (Table 3), and CF testing (10/17 programs) (Bickerstaff et al, 2001; Donnai and Elles, 2001; Ekstein and Katzenstein, 2001; Byck et al, 2006; Berkenstadt et al, 2007; Drury et al, 2007; Washington State Department of Health, 2008; Blumenfeld et al, 2012; Currier et al, 2012; Long and Goldblatt, 2014).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other tools reported in a few studies were screening tests (i.e., 1st or 2nd trimester prenatal tests, screening test for FH), medical records, death certificates, cancer registry, telephone counseling and physician referral letters. Family history collection and risk assessment were mostly performed in programs providing BRCA1/2 (52/59 programs), Lynch syndrome (21/23 programs) (Table 3), and CF testing (10/17 programs) (Bickerstaff et al, 2001; Donnai and Elles, 2001; Ekstein and Katzenstein, 2001; Byck et al, 2006; Berkenstadt et al, 2007; Drury et al, 2007; Washington State Department of Health, 2008; Blumenfeld et al, 2012; Currier et al, 2012; Long and Goldblatt, 2014).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The trends identified in this study have been seen in the past after the introduction of new prenatal screening tests. For example, there was a significant decrease in the demand for invasive testing after the introduction of NT measurements [ 32 , 33 ] A decrease in the number of invasive procedures was also seen after first trimester combined screening was made available to Medi-Cal (state insured) patients [ 34 ]. This suggests that when cell-free fetal DNA screening becomes validated in lower-risk populations, it will continue to exceed other screening methods in popularity and further reduce the number of invasive tests performed.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Final analyte values are reported in multiples of the median (MoM), which is controlled for multiple variables including maternal age, ethnicity, smoking status, pregestational diabetes status, and use of assisted reproductive technology. 17…”
Section: Serum Analytesmentioning
confidence: 99%