1. Noninvasive Prenatal Screening for Trisomy 21 in Patients with a Vanishing Twin.
- Author
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Kleinfinger, Pascale, Luscan, Armelle, Descourvieres, Léa, Buzas, Daniela, Boughalem, Aicha, Serero, Stéphane, Valduga, Mylène, Trost, Detlef, Costa, Jean-Marc, Vivanti, Alexandre J., and Lohmann, Laurence
- Subjects
DOWN syndrome ,MEDICAL screening ,FETAL echocardiography ,TRISOMY 13 syndrome ,FETAL ultrasonic imaging ,TRISOMY 18 syndrome ,INVASIVE diagnosis ,MULTIPLE pregnancy - Abstract
A vanishing twin (VT) occurs in up to 30% of early diagnosed twin pregnancies and is associated with an increased risk of fetal aneuploidy. Here, we describe our experience in a large VT population of 847 patients that underwent noninvasive prenatal testing (NIPT) for common fetal trisomies over a three-year period. All patients underwent an ultrasound examination prior to NIPT. Two comparison populations were included, namely, the singleton (n = 105,560) and the viable multiple gestation pregnancy samples (n = 9691) collected over the same period. All NIPT samples in the VT population received a result, of which 14 were high-risk for trisomy 21 (1.6%), nine for trisomy 18 (1.1%), and six for trisomy 13 (0.7%). Diagnostic testing confirmed the presence of trisomy 21 in 6/12 samples, giving a positive predictive value of 50%. One trisomy 18 case and no trisomy 13 cases were confirmed. The time between fetal demise and NIPT sampling did not appear to affect the number of true- or false-positive cases. In conclusion, NIPT is an effective screening method for trisomy 21 in the surviving fetus(es) in VT pregnancies. For trisomies 18 and 13, a positive NIPT should be interpreted carefully and ultrasound monitoring is preferrable over invasive diagnostic testing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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