4.6 Article

A prospective study of the clinical utility of prenatal chromosomal microarray analysis in fetuses with ultrasound abnormalities and an exploration of a framework for reporting unclassified variants and risk factors

Journal

GENETICS IN MEDICINE
Volume 16, Issue 6, Pages 469-476

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/gim.2013.168

Keywords

array CGH; chromosomal microarray; CNV; copy number variation; genetic counseling; prenatal diagnosis

Funding

  1. Agency for Innovation by Science and Technology (IWT) [SBO-60848]
  2. Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) [G.0320.07]
  3. University of Leuven (KU Leuven) SymBioSys [PFV/10/016, GOA/12/015]

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Purpose: To evaluate the clinical utility of chromosomal microarrays for prenatal diagnosis by a prospective study of fetuses with abnormalities detected on ultrasound. Methods: Patients referred for prenatal diagnosis due to ultrasound anomalies underwent analysis by array comparative genomic hybridization as the first-tier diagnostic test. Results: A total of 383 prenatal samples underwent analysis by array comparative genomic hybridization. Array analysis revealed causal imbalances in a total of 9.6% of patients (n = 37). Submicroscopic copy-number variations were detected in 2.6% of patients (n = 10/37), and arrays added valuable information over conventional karyotyping in 3.9% of patients (n = 15/37). We highlight a novel advantage of arrays; a 500-kb paternal insertional translocation is the likely driver of a de novo unbalanced translocation, thus improving recurrence risk calculation in this family. Variants of uncertain significance were revealed in 1.6% of patients (n = 6/383). Conclusion: We demonstrate the added value of chromosomal; microarrays for prenatal diagnosis in the presence of ultrasound anomalies. We advocate reporting back only copy-number variations with known pathogenic significance. Although this approach might be considered opposite to the ideal of full reproductive autonomy of the parents, we argue why providing all information to parents may result in a false sense of autonomy.

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