Carrier Screening in AJ population Flashcards

1
Q

What is the overall carrier rate of “Jewish Genetic Disorders” in the AJ population?

A

1 in 4 to 1 in 5 Ashkenazi Jews are carriers for one of these disorders

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2
Q

Importance of the history of Tay-Sachs and the carrier screening program

A

Over 30 years ago, the development of an accurate and reliable biochemical test led to a successful carrier screening program for Tay-Sachs. The subsequent widespread adoption of Tay-Sachs carrier screening RESULTED IN A SIGNIFICANT DROP IN THIS DISEASE among the AJ population

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3
Q

What diseases should be included when offering carriers screening to couples of AJ descent when pregnant or considering pregnancy?

A
  • CF
  • Canavan disease
  • Familial dysautonomia
  • Tay-Sachs
  • Fanconi Anemia group C
  • Niemann-Pick type A
  • Bloom Syndrome
  • Mucolipidosis IV
  • Gaucher disease Type 1
    (carrier screening for these disorders should include testing for specific mutations which will result in a carrier detection rate of 95% or more)
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4
Q

How is it determined what diseases to add to the recommended list for carrier screening?

A
  • Natural history of disorder should be well understood and carry a potential for significant morbidity and/or mortality in the homozygous or compound heterozygous state
  • Based on available literature there should be either >90% detection rate or an allele frequency of 1% or higher in the AJ population
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5
Q

What should occur in the counseling of this carrier screening?

A
  • General description of the disorders
  • Variability of symptoms experienced
  • Understanding that in the case of a negative test, a residual risk remains
  • Carriers = not at risk of developing the disease, but can pass the gene to offspring
  • The success of the Tay-Sachs screening program has resulted in the possible misperception that the Tay-Sachs gene is no longer present in the AJ community, but bc a carrier is asymptomatic, screening should occur in every generation
  • Formal genetic counseling and medical genetics consultation should be readily available to anyone wanting it
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6
Q

If only one partner in a couple is of AJ descent should testing be offered?

A

Yes, ideally the Jewish member of the couple should be tested first, and if positive, the other partner should be tested for that gene regardless of background

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