Effects of Blood-Processing Protocols on Fetal and Total DNA Quantification in Maternal Plasma

Author:

Chiu Rossa W K1,Poon Leo L M1,Lau Tze K2,Leung Tse N2,Wong Eric M C3,Lo Y M Dennis1

Affiliation:

1. Departments of 1 Chemical Pathology and

2. Obstetrics and Gynecology, and

3. Center for Clinical Trials and Epidemiological Research, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Prince of Wales Hospital, Shatin, New Territories, Hong Kong, SAR

Abstract

Abstract Background: Recently, apoptotic cells have been found in plasma obtained by centrifugation of blood from pregnant women, raising the question of what constitutes plasma and whether plasma is truly cell free. We compared the effects of different blood-processing protocols on the quantification, DNA composition, and day-to-day fluctuation of fetal and total DNA in maternal plasma. Methods: Blood samples were collected from healthy pregnant women. The blood sample from each individual was simultaneously processed by different means, including the following: Percoll separation, centrifugation, microcentrifugation, and filtration. The resulting plasma aliquots were subjected to real-time quantitative amplification of the β-globin (for total DNA) and SRY (for fetal DNA) genes. The differences in the β-globin and SRY DNA concentrations and the degree of variation between the various plasma aliquots were assessed statistically. Results: Different protocols of blood processing significantly affected the quantification and the day-to-day fluctuation of total (P <0.001), but not fetal (quantification, P = 0.336; fluctuation, P = 0.206), DNA in maternal plasma. The quantitative difference could be attributed to the fact that efficacies of different protocols for generating cell-free plasma vary. Processing blood samples by centrifugation followed by filtration or microcentrifugation is effective in producing cell-free plasma. Conclusions: Standardization in plasma-processing protocols is needed for maternal plasma DNA analysis, especially for quantification of total DNA in maternal plasma. Such preanalytic factors may also affect other applications of plasma DNA analysis.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Biochemistry (medical),Clinical Biochemistry

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