Publication | Closed Access
Confined placental mosaicism, IUGR, and adverse pregnancy outcome: A controlled retrospective U.K. collaborative survey
133
Citations
17
References
1994
Year
FertilityAdverse Pregnancy OutcomeGeneticsReproductive HealthGenetic EpidemiologyGynecologyChromosome AbnormalityEpigeneticsReproductive EpidemiologyEmbryologyHigh-risk PregnancyPlacental MosaicismReproductive MedicinePublic HealthPlacental DevelopmentSexual And Reproductive HealthMedicineMaternal ComplicationMaternal HealthAneuploidyPlacental DiseasePrenatal DiagnosisMaternal-fetal MedicinePrenatal TestingPlacental FunctionPediatricsPregnancyFetal ComplicationNumerical Chromosome Abnormality
In a retrospective collaborative study involving 21 U.K. laboratories and 11,775 CVS prenatal diagnostic procedures, a total of 73 cases of confined placental mosaicism (CPM) were identified among the 8004 first-trimester referrals because of advanced maternal age, a previous child with a numerical chromosome abnormality, or a family history of the same. Data were collected on subsequent cytogenetic follow-up and pregnancy outcome for each case and a referral matched control. Comparison with the control population failed to demonstrate a marked increase in adverse pregnancy outcome in the CPM group, but a significant increase in both low and high birth weight infants was recorded. In a parallel study, 7 out of 108 cases, referred for prenatal diagnosis because of ultrasound detection of isolated intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR) in the second or third trimester, were shown to have a chromosome abnormality restricted to the extraembryonic tissues. These included cases of CPM involving trisomy 9 and del(13)(q13), neither of which has previously been reported in association with IUGR.
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