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Tests reveal risk of passing on SCD, other diseases

Photo by Graham Colm
Blood samples

Quest Diagnostics has announced the US launch of QHerit™, a genetic screening service that helps people of multiple ethnicities identify their risk of passing on heritable disorders to their offspring.

The QHerit Pan-Ethnic Expanded Carrier Screen is a panel of tests for the 22 heritable diseases cited in new screening guidelines from the American College of Gynecology (ACOG).

Among the diseases are alpha-thalassemia, Fanconi anemia, and beta-hemoglobinopathies, including sickle cell disease (SCD).

Traditionally, genetic carrier screening has been used for at-risk populations based on specific ancestry assumptions and focused on only a few likely disorders with higher prevalence associated with that ethnicity.

In its new guidelines, ACOG recommends offering pan-ethnic, expanded carrier, and ethnic-specific screening for all women considering pregnancy. The guidelines also state that the partner of a woman who tests positive may be a candidate for screening.

QHerit screens women and men for clinically relevant variants of genes for disorders that could have potentially devastating consequences, result in early death, or create a need for significant early intervention.

The disorders covered by QHerit include:

Disease Race/ethnicity
Alpha-thalassemia Mediterranean, Middle East, Southeast Asian, African, Chinese, Asian Indian
Beta-

hemoglobinopathies

(including SCD)

Mediterranean, Middle East, Southeast Asian, African, Chinese, Asian Indian
Bloom syndrome Ashkenazi Jewish descent (AJ)
Canavan disease AJ and non-AJ
Cystic fibrosis African American, AJ, Asian American, Hispanic American, non-Hispanic Caucasian
Dihydrolipoamide

dehydrogenase

deficiency

AJ
Familial dysautonomia AJ
Familial hyperinsulinism AJ
Fanconi anemia Type C AJ
Fragile X syndrome Females
Gaucher disease AJ
Glycogen storage

disease Type Ia

AJ, Caucasian
Joubert syndrome 2 AJ
Maple syrup urine

disease

AJ
Mucolipidosis Type IV AJ
Nemaline myopathy AJ
Niemann-Pick

disease Types A & B

AJ
Spinal muscular

atrophy

African American, AJ, Asian, Caucasian, Hispanic
Tay-Sachs disease AJ, French Canadian, general population
Usher syndrome,

Type IF

AJ
Usher syndrome,

Type IIIA

AJ
Walker-Warburg

syndrome

AJ

QHerit is now available for order by US physicians. For more information, visit www.QHerit.com.