UCSF Benioff Children's Hospitals Fetal Treatment Center  

San Francisco,  CA 
United States
https://acog.fetaltreatmentcenter.com/
  • Booth: 2004

The UCSF Fetal Treatment Center is a multidisciplinary comprehensive clinic with two locations, San Francisco and Oakland. We are pioneers in precision diagnostics, genetics, and treatment of fetal anomalies. We provide care to over 500 families annually, including counseling sessions with a team of experts from a myriad of specialties – Perinatology, Pediatric Surgery, Cardiology, Neonatology, Nephrology, Neurology, Urology as well as other specialists. We partner closely with the referring provider to ensure optimal care and health for these families and future pregnancies.


 Press Releases

  • ‘Exome Sequencing’ by UCSF Team Sheds Light on Hydrops Fetalis

    By Elizabeth Fernandez

    A new study by University of California researchers shows the promise of high-throughput DNA-sequencing technologies to improve prenatal diagnosis and pregnancy outcomes for women who have experienced an abnormal prenatal ultrasound.

    In the UC San Francisco-led study, scientists used a technique called exome sequencing to identify genetic diseases as the underlying cause in 37 of 127 cases of nonimmune hydrops fetalis (NIHF), a life-threatening condition in which the fetus is overloaded with fluid. The study was published online Oct. 7 in The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM).

    Corresponding author Teresa Sparks, MD, MAS, a UCSF assistant professor in the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Reproductive Sciences, led the study with senior study author Mary Norton, MD, a professor in the same department. “The cause of most cases of NIHF is not identified with standard testing, but when we apply exome sequencing, we find a genetic diagnosis in nearly 30 percent of cases of previously unknown cause,” Sparks said.

    NIHF affects about one in every 1,700 to 3,000 pregnancies in the United States and is associated with high risks of stillbirth, preterm birth, neonatal death and other complications. Although NIHF often leads to death, identifying the precise genetic cause is critical, as associated outcomes vary widely in severity.

    NIHF can be a manifestation of many genetic diseases, but evidence of abnormal fluid accumulation in the fetus detected through an ultrasound exam – whether it occurs under the skin, in the abdomen, or around the heart or lungs – does not pinpoint an underlying cause.

    Participants in the study were referred from throughout the United States after NIHF was identified with prenatal ultrasound but no underlying genetic disease was found using long established methods for detecting genetic abnormalities. These traditional genetic tests – karyotype and chromosomal microarray analysis – detect large abnormalities in chromosomes, not disorders caused by a defect in a single gene as are identified with exome sequencing.

    Exome sequencing is the complete spelling out of the genetic code for DNA segments within the genome that serves as the blueprints for proteins. This has become possible to perform quickly and accurately in recent years, thanks to the continual refinement of technology that can sequence DNA strands that are thousands of nucleotide building blocks long, often in a massively parallel manner that helps ensure accurate results. Exome sequencing can identify even the smallest mutations, such as a change in a single building-block nucleotide base pair.

    Importantly, many of the disorders identified in the study have not previously been reported in association with NIHF, so the findings broaden knowledge of genetic diseases that can present with the condition. Among the most common of 37 genetic disorders identified in the NEJM study were 11 cases affecting a key intracellular signaling pathway called RAS-MAPK, four cases of inborn errors of metabolism, four cases of musculoskeletal disorders, and three cases each of lymphatic, neurodevelopmental, cardiovascular and blood disorders. Many of these diagnoses would also have been missed by commercial gene panels, Sparks said.

    Most mutations identified in the study newly arose in the fetus, but several were inherited, with the potential to affect future pregnancies with the same biologic mother or father.

    “There is a very wide range in genetic diagnoses underlying NIHF, and identifying the diagnosis is essential for families and healthcare providers,” Sparks said. “With advanced genetic testing, there is much more we can discover for families to help them understand the situation, for obstetricians and neonatologists to better take care of the pregnancy and anticipate the needs of the newborn, and ultimately to guide the development of novel prenatal management strategies such as in-utero therapies to improve health outcomes over the long term.”

    For some of the genetic disorders identified in the study, prenatal interventions that can improve or save lives already have been identified. For example, genetic causes of anemia in the fetus may be closely monitored, and the fetus may receive a blood transfusion if needed.

    Similarly, for some of the inborn errors of metabolism identified in the study, enzyme therapies already are available after birth. Early diagnosis and treatment of these metabolic disorders leads to better outcomes. A co-author of the NEJM study, Tippi MacKenzie, MD, a professor with the UCSF Department of Surgery, is investigating in utero treatments for specific genetic disorders underlying NIHF in a new clinical trial. Sparks, Norton, and co-authors are also pursuing further investigations to identify additional genomic abnormalities underlying NIHF for the cases that remain unsolved.

    Co-Authors: All co-authors of the NEJM study are affiliated with the University of California Fetal–Maternal Consortium or the UCSF Center for Maternal-Fetal Precision Medicine. Additional UCSF co-authors of the study include Billie Lianoglou, Sarah Downum, Sachi Patel, Amanda Faubel, Anne Slavotinek, Patrick Devine, Ugur Hodoglugil, Jessica Van Ziffle, and Stephan Sanders.

    Funding: The study was funded by the UCSF Center for Maternal-Fetal Precision Medicine, the Fetal Health Foundation, the Brianna Marie Foundation, Ultragenyx, and the National Institutes of Health.

    The University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) is exclusively focused on the health sciences and is dedicated to promoting health worldwide through advanced biomedical research, graduate-level education in the life sciences and health professions, and excellence in patient care. UCSF Health, which serves as UCSF’s primary academic medical center, includes top-ranked specialty hospitals and other clinical programs, and has affiliations throughout the Bay Area.

  • Building a cross-disciplinary, inspiring scientific community and supporting visionary, early-stage research.

    We’re delighted to announce a new cohort of scientists to be named Chan Zuckerberg Biohub Investigators. Successful applicants are receiving $1 million in unrestricted gift funds over a nonrenewable 5-year term ($200,000 per year), with a start date of March 1, 2022.

    The Chan Zuckerberg Biohub Investigator Program, open to faculty from Stanford University, UC San Francisco, and UC Berkeley, funds innovative, visionary research with the goal of building engaged, collaborative scientific communities to help solve critical challenges in biomedicine.

    The 86 awardees in our new cohort, who were chosen from nearly 700 applicants through a competitive process judged by nationally recognized external reviewers and a blue-ribbon Selection Advisory Committee, represent a diverse range of disciplines, including basic biological sciences, clinical biomedical sciences, physics, chemistry, engineering, computer and data sciences, statistics, and public health. 

    NEWEST COHORT

    Below are the scientists who will make up the new cohort of CZ Biohub Investigators.

    View the profiles of current CZ Biohub Investigators, profiles of alumni Biohub Investigators who are members of intercampus teams, profiles of CZ Biohub’s intramural group and platform leaders, and profiles of CZ Biohub’s leadership team. 

    • HILLEL ADESNIK, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • JENNIFER AHERN, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • NICOLAS ALTEMOSE, D.PHIL., PH.D.Stanford University
    • MARK ANDERSON, M.D., PH.D.UCSF
    • KATRIN ANDREASSON, M.D.Stanford University
    • ANA PAULA ARRUDA, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • ZHENAN BAO, PH.D.Stanford University
    • JADE BENJAMIN-CHUNG, PH.D., M.P.H.Stanford University
    • TREVER BIVONA, M.D., PH.D.UCSF
    • CATHERINE BLISH, M.D., PH.D.Stanford University
    • ANNE BRUNET, PH.D.Stanford University
    • DANIELE CANZIO, PH.D.UCSF
    • EDWARD CHANG, M.D.UCSF
    • SARAH CHASINS, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • CHARLES CHIU, M.D., PH.D.UCSF
    • THOMAS CLANDININ, PH.D.Stanford University
    • CHRISTINA CURTIS, PH.D.Stanford University
    • JOSE DINNENY, PH.D.Stanford University
    • JENNIFER DIONNE, PH.D.Stanford University
    • ELIZABETH EGAN, M.D., PH.D.Stanford University
    • SHIRIT EINAV, M.D.Stanford University
    • STEFANO ERMON, PH.D.Stanford University
    • MICHAEL FISCHBACH, PH.D.Stanford University
    • YVETTE FISHER, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • DANIEL FLETCHER, PH.D., D.PHIL.UC Berkeley
    • POLLY FORDYCE, PH.D.Stanford University
    • EMILY FOX, PH.D.Stanford University
    • HERNAN GARCIA, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • ZEV GARTNER, PH.D.UCSF
    • PASCAL GELDSETZER, M.D., PH.D., M.P.H.Stanford University
    • AARON GITLER, PH.D.Stanford University
    • BENJAMIN GOOD, PH.D.Stanford University
    • HANI GOODARZI, PH.D.UCSF
    • CARLOS GUESTRIN, PH.D.Stanford University
    • LIN HE, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • ROGELIO HERNÁNDEZ-LÓPEZ, PH.D.Stanford University
    • AMY HERR, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • BO HUANG, PH.D.UCSF
    • FRANKLIN HUANG, M.D., PH.D.UCSF
    • KC HUANG, PH.D.Stanford University
    • NILAH IOANNIDIS, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • TANJA KORTEMME, PH.D.UCSF
    • BRITT KOSKELLA, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • DIANA LAIRD, PH.D.UCSF
    • MARKITA LANDRY, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • CHARLES LANGELIER, M.D., PH.D.UCSF
    • LIANA LAREAU, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • HAO LI, PH.D.UCSF
    • AASHISH MANGLIK, M.D., PH.D.UCSF
    • NICOLE MARTINEZ, PH.D.Stanford University
    • MICHAEL MCMANUS, PH.D.UCSF
    • SHAERI MUKHERJEE, PH.D.UCSF
    • DIPTI NAYAK, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • AARON NEWMAN, PH.D.Stanford University
    • OANH NGUYEN, M.D.UCSF
    • ELPHÈGE NORA, PH.D.UCSF
    • JAMES NUÑEZ, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • LUCY O'BRIEN, PH.D.Stanford University
    • ZIAD OBERMEYER, M.D.UC Berkeley
    • MELANIE OTT, M.D., PH.D.Gladstone Institutes/UCSF
    • SERGIU PAȘCA, M.D.Stanford University
    • DMITRI PETROV, PH.D.Stanford University
    • AMY PICKERING, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • KATHERINE POLLARD, PH.D.Gladstone Institutes/UCSF
    • KIRA POSKANZER, PH.D.UCSF
    • JOSEPH PUGLISI, PH.D.Stanford University
    • ELIZABETH PURDOM, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • FILIPA RIJO-FERREIRA, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • STANLEY QI, PH.D.Stanford University
    • ROBERTO RICARDO GONZALEZ, M.D., PH.D.UCSF
    • ISABEL RODRÍGUEZ-BARRAQUER, M.D., PH.D.UCSF
    • DANIEL ROKHSAR, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • JENNIFER ROSENBLUTH, M.D., PH.D.UCSF
    • FLORENTINE RUTAGANIRA, PH.D.Stanford University
    • RADA SAVIC, PH.D.UCSF
    • ALANNA SCHEPARTZ, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • SETH SHIPMAN, PH.D.Gladstone Institutes/UCSF
    • ANITA SIL, M.D., PH.D.UCSF
    • JAN SKOTHEIM, PH.D.Stanford University
    • MARK SKYLAR-SCOTT, PH.D.Stanford University
    • JUSTIN SONNENBURG, PH.D.Stanford University
    • TERESA SPARKS, M.D.UCSF
    • AARON STREETS, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • SARA SULIMAN, M.P.H., PH.D.UCSF
    • HAWA RACINE THIAM, PH.D.Stanford University
    • ALICE TING, PH.D.Stanford University
    • PETER TURNBAUGH, PH.D.UCSF
    • SRIGOKUL UPADHYAYULA, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • DANIEL WAGNER, PH.D.UCSF
    • LAURA WALLER, PH.D.UC Berkeley
    • ARUN WIITA, M.D., PH.D.UCSF
    • CATERA WILDER, PH.D.UCSF
    • HELEN WILLSEY, PH.D.UCSF
    • ELLEN YEH, M.D., PH.D.Stanford University
    • SERENA YEUNG, PH.D.Stanford University
    • JAMES ZOU, PH.D.Stanford University

    ABOUT THE CHAN ZUCKERBERG BIOHUB

    The Chan Zuckerberg Biohub (CZ Biohub) is an independent, nonprofit medical research organization that was established in 2016 with the goals of understanding the mechanisms underlying disease and developing new technologies that will enable fresh avenues of scientific discovery and lead to actionable diagnostics and effective therapies. CZ Biohub was conceived and launched in partnership with Stanford University, UC San Francisco, and UC Berkeley to promote close collaboration across the three campuses in pursuit of this mission. CZ Biohub has an intramural research program focused on technology development, cell biology, and infectious disease, and an extramural research program – anchored by the Chan Zuckerberg Biohub Investigator Program – that provides unrestricted funds to faculty members at all three campuses to pursue their most exciting, risky, and innovative ideas.

    CZ BIOHUB INVESTIGATOR PROGRAM

    A foundational goal of the Chan Zuckerberg Biohub Investigator Program is to build and sustain an engaged, interactive, and collaborative community of researchers that spans across disciplines and across the campuses of our three partner universities, Stanford University, UCSF, and UC Berkeley.

    The backbone of our community and a primary engine of collaboration is found in the CZ Biohub Investigator meetings. CZ Biohub Investigators are expected to participate fully in the CZ Biohub community by attending at least half of the CZ Biohub Investigator meetings that are held every two weeks.

    With the goal of accelerating the pace of scientific discovery, CZ Biohub Investigators are required to upload all manuscripts on which they are a corresponding author to a preprint server such as bioRxiv.org or arXiv.org upon submission to a peer-reviewed journal. Intellectual property generated with material support from CZ Biohub funding or resources will be jointly owned with the universities; inventor royalty sharing will not be affected and licensing will be led by CZ Biohub with university approval and in direct consultation with the Investigator.