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Publication, Part of

NCARDRS Congenital Anomaly Official Statistics Report, 2020

Official statistics

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3.1 Timing of detection and confirmation of anomalies

Introduction

Some congenital anomalies are detectable during pregnancy and others are not. Screening is offered by NHS maternity services to maximise antenatal detection of specified conditions where pregnant people choose, and present in time. NCARDRS provides a separate annual audit of the NHS Fetal Anomaly Screening Programme (FASP) to individual NHS providers of maternity services to monitor the performance of this screening.

NCARDRS recognises that those who are pregnant make a personal informed decision whether to have fetal anomaly screening or not. Early diagnosis of a congenital anomaly (as early as possible in the pregnancy) gives families greater choice about their pregnancy and enables better planning for the delivery of babies where specialist intervention or palliative care may be required soon after birth.

In this chapter, congenital anomalies are reported by timing of detection and timing of confirmation. Timing of detection is defined as when an anomaly is first suspected. Timing of confirmation reflects the diagnosis of the anomaly using a genetic test and is confined to Down’s syndrome, Edwards' syndrome and Patau’s syndrome.

 

 


Last edited: 1 December 2022 10:17 am