Carrier screening tests are performed using blood, saliva, or a cheek swab collected from a couple. Tests are available that employ biochemical enzyme screening or molecular genetic screening. With advances in molecular genetic screening, it has become the preferred method since enzyme screening might miss some carriers.
Traditional molecular genetic screening tests are targeted carrier screening tests that focus on analyzing one or several causative genetic changes and are recommended based on your family history or ethnicity.
Expanded carrier screening is now recommended for all ethnicities due to the prevalence of mixed populations, causing difficulties in determining who is at risk based on ethnicity.
Expanded carrier screening covers many more genetic disorders in one test using one sample. Available tests have different coverage in terms of number of genes and ethnicities included. Depending on the test ordered, it can cover from tens to hundreds of genes across a broad range of ethnicities.
New genetic analysis technologies, such as microarrays and next-generation sequencing, are enabling comprehensive, efficient, and cost-effective expanded carrier screening tests for the analysis of more causative genetic variants across a broad range of ethnicities. Microarrays, a technology that can analyze DNA of known genes from the entire human genome in one test, can screen all known causative variants for inherited diseases by consolidating multiple targeted tests on multiple technology platforms into one test, resulting in a quick, comprehensive reporting of a couple’s carrier status.