• Medicine · Jul 2024

    Review Case Reports

    Prenatal detection of distal 18p deletion by chromosomal microarray analysis: Three case reports and literature review.

    • Tangfei Xu, Fagui Yue, Jing He, Hongguo Zhang, and Ruizhi Liu.
    • Center for Reproductive Medicine, Center for Prenatal Diagnosis, First Hospital, Jilin University, Changchun, China.
    • Medicine (Baltimore). 2024 Jul 26; 103 (30): e39046e39046.

    BackgroundChromosome 18p deletion syndrome is caused by total or partial deletion of the short arm of chromosome 18 and associated with cognitive impairment, growth retardation and mild facial dysmorphism. However, most studies on the genotype-phenotype correlations in the 18p region are diagnosed postnatally. Prenatal reports involving 18p deletions are limited.MethodsThree pregnant women opted for invasive prenatal testing due to noninvasive prenatal testing indicating high risk for chromosome 18 abnormalities. Karyotypic analysis and chromosomal microarray analysis (CMA) were performed simultaneously. The pregnancy outcomes for all cases were followed up. Meanwhile, we also made a literature review on prenatal phenotypes of 18p deletions.ResultsG-banding analysis showed that 2 fetuses presented abnormal karyotypes: 45,XN,der(18)t(18;21)(p11; q11),-21 (case 2) and 46,XN,18p- (case 3). The karyotype of case 1 was normal. Meanwhile, CMA detected 4.37 Mb (case 1), 7.26 Mb (case 2) and 14.97 Mb (case 3) deletions in chromosome 18p region. All 3 pregnancies were terminated finally according to genetic counseling based upon abnormal CMA results.ConclusionPrenatal diagnosis of 18p deletion syndrome is full of challenges due to the phenotypic diversity, incomplete penetrance and lack of prenatal phenotypes. Increased nuchal translucency and holoprosencephaly are common prenatal phenotypes of distal 18p deletion. For fetuses carrying 18p deletions with atypical sonographic phenotypes, noninvasive prenatal testing could be adopted as an effective approach.Copyright © 2024 the Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.

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