RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Clinical Utility of Expanded Carrier Screening: Reproductive Behaviors of At-Risk Couples JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 069393 DO 10.1101/069393 A1 Caroline Ghiossi A1 James D. Goldberg A1 Imran S. Haque A1 Gabriel A. Lazarin A1 Kenny K. Wong YR 2016 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/08/14/069393.abstract AB Purpose Expanded carrier screening (ECS) analyzes dozens or hundreds of recessive genes for determining reproductive risk. Data on clinical utility of screening conditions beyond professional guidelines is scarce.Methods Individuals underwent ECS for up to 110 genes. 537 at-risk couples (ARC), those in which both partners carry the same recessive disease, were invited to a retrospective IRB-approved survey of their reproductive decision making after receiving ECS results.Results 64 eligible ARC completed the survey. Of 45 respondents screened preconceptionally, 62% (n=28) planned IVF with PGD or prenatal diagnosis (PNDx) in future pregnancies. 29% (n=13) were not planning to alter reproductive decisions. The remaining 9% (n=4) of responses were unclear.Of 19 pregnant respondents, 42% (n=8) elected PNDx, 11% (n=2) planned amniocentesis but miscarried, and 47% (n=9) considered the condition insufficiently severe to warrant invasive testing. Of the 8 pregnancies that underwent PNDx, 5 were unaffected and 3 were affected. 2 of 3 affected pregnancies were terminated.Disease severity was found to have significant association (p=0.000145) with changes in decision making, whereas guideline status of diseases, controlled for severity, was not (p=0.284).Conclusion Most ARC altered reproductive planning, demonstrating the clinical utility of ECS. Severity of conditions factored into decision making.