Reproductive genetic counselling in non-mosaic 47,XXY patients: Implications for preimplantation or prenatal diagnosis: Case report and review

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Abstract

With an incidence of ∼1 in 500 male newborns, the 47,XXY genotype is one the most common sex chromosome anomalies. It is also the most frequent genetic cause of human infertility. Some non-mosaic 47,XXY patients have sperm production which allows infertility treatment to be offered by ICSI. Therefore, the risk of transmitting a chromosome anomaly to the next generation is an important problem in reproductive genetic counselling of these patients. Here, we report on a twin pregnancy where two karyotypically normal neonates 46,XX and 46,XY were born after the use of ICSI in assisted reproduction of a patient with a non-mosaic 47,XXY syndrome. To date, only 38 evolving pregnancies including the present cases, have been reported after ICSI using sperm from non-mosaic 47,XXY patients. Although these data are scarce, they suggest that the risk of chromosome anomaly in the offspring of these patients is low; hence, their reproductive genetic counselling can be reassuring, and management of the pregnancy can proceed with caution.

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Tachdjian, G., Frydman, N., Morichon-Delvallez, N., Le Dû, A., Fanchin, R., Vekemans, M., & Frydman, R. (2003). Reproductive genetic counselling in non-mosaic 47,XXY patients: Implications for preimplantation or prenatal diagnosis: Case report and review. Human Reproduction, 18(2), 271–275. https://doi.org/10.1093/humrep/deg070

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