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Economic assessment of maternal serum screening for Down's syndrome using human chorionic gonadotropin
Authors:V. Seror  F. Muller  J. P. Moatti  C. Le Gales  A. Boue
Affiliation:1. INSERM, Research Unit 357 on ‘Health Economies’, Salle Déjerine, Hôpital de Bicětre, 94270 Le Kremlin Bicětre Cedex, France;2. Biochemistry Laboratory of Ambroise Paré Hospital, 92104 Boulogne Cedex, France

INSERM, Research Unit 73 on ‘Genetic and Fetal Pathology’, Centre International de l'Enfance, 75016 Paris, France;3. INSERM, Research Unit 73 on ‘Genetic and Fetal Pathology’, Centre International de l'Enfance, 75016 Paris, France

Abstract:The effectiveness and costs of prenatal screening programmes for Down's syndrome using maternal serum markers will vary significantly depending on the biological cut-off values chosen in order to select women, at each maternal age, who will be sent for amniocentesis. On the basis of the first French prospective study of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) measurement in maternal serum, this paper shows that the screening protocol currently used in France, where hCG cut-off values are defined in order to offer amniocentesis to women of all ages with a 1 percent fetal risk of Down's syndrome, would detect 64·06 per cent of all cases of trisomy 21 at birth and would be highly profitable for the French social security system. On the basis of a representative sample of 100 000 pregnant women, the total costs of screening would reach $8 302 000 but would generate net potential savings of $32 186 000 in terms of life-long costs of care for trisomic 21 children which would be ‘avoided’ by termination of pregnancy following a positive diagnosis of Down's syndrome. Economic assessment shows that cost-benefit analysis would justify lower hCG cut-off values and a higher detection rate of fetal Down's syndrome (74·45 per cent) than the current French protocol. This paper concludes that it is ethical and value-laden issues, such as the consequences for women and couples of false positives and false negatives of screening, rather than economic and financial arguments that may set limits to the utilization of screening for Down's syndrome using maternal serum markers like hCG.
Keywords:Down's syndrome  Maternal serum markers  Prenatal screening  Cost-benefit analysis
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