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Blood test tells fetal sex in early pregnancy

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Normally, parents who want to know the sex of their baby before it''s born find out through ultrasound done in the second trimester. A blood test that can be done early in pregnancy is highly accurate at determining the sex of the fetus, however, a new study finds.

Consequently, maternal blood tests that pick up certain markers of fetal sex have been developed and put into use in recent years. So far, research has shown the accuracy of these tests to vary widely, depending on the methods used.

In this latest study, published in the journal Obstetrics & Gynecology, researchers in the Netherlands found that the testing method used at their center was 100 percent accurate in determining fetal sex among nearly 200 pregnant women.

Part of what''s new about the findings is that they show the effectiveness of blood testing as it is done in routine practice -- and not just in the research setting, Dr. Ellen van der Schoot, of Sanquin Research Amsterdam, told Reuters Health in an email. The study does not discuss costs, nor when the test might be available to the general public.

Still, the findings, according to van der Schoot and her colleagues, support using the tests in cases where fetal sex is important in detecting or managing certain inherited medical conditions.

For example, congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) is a genetic disorder that causes girls to develop abnormal external genitalia and male-like characteristics like a deep voice and excessive body hair.

It is possible, however, to treat the disorder with the steroid dexamethasone as soon as pregnancy is established, so knowing the fetal sex sooner is better than later.

Similarly, fetal sex is key in genetic disorders linked to abnormalities in the X chromosome. These disorders -- such as hemophilia and Duchenne/Becker muscular dystrophy -- are almost always seen in boys rather than girls, because boys inherit only one X chromosome, from the mother. (Girls inherit an X chromosome from each

parent.)

In cases where a mother is known to carry an X-linked genetic defect, blood testing for fetal sex tells doctors whether further, invasive testing for the particular genetic disorder should be done. If the fetus is female, invasive tests can be avoided.

In the current study, van der Schoot and her colleagues looked at 201 pregnant women who had blood testing at their lab between 2003 and 2009. The test, done as early as the seventh week of pregnancy, determines fetal sex by looking for two genes found on the Y sex chromosome.

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