Multicenter clinical experience with non-invasive cell-free DNA screening for monosomy X and related X-chromosome variants

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Abstract

Objective: We aimed to investigate how the presence of fetal anomalies and different X chromosome variants influences Cell-free DNA (cfDNA) screening results for monosomy X. Methods: From a multicenter retrospective survey on 673 pregnancies with prenatally suspected or confirmed Turner syndrome, we analyzed the subgroup for which prenatal cfDNA screening and karyotype results were available. A cfDNA screening result was defined as true positive (TP) when confirmatory testing showed 45,X or an X-chromosome variant. Results: We had cfDNA results, karyotype, and phenotype data for 55 pregnancies. cfDNA results were high risk for monosomy X in 48/55, of which 23 were TP and 25 were false positive (FP). 32/48 high-risk cfDNA cases did not show fetal anomalies. Of these, 7 were TP. All were X-chromosome variants. All 16 fetuses with high-risk cfDNA result and ultrasound anomalies were TP. Of fetuses with abnormalities, those with 45,X more often had fetal hydrops/cystic hygroma, whereas those with “variant” karyotypes had different anomalies. Conclusion: Both, 45,X or X-chromosome variants can be detected after a high-risk cfDNA result for monosomy X. When there are fetal anomalies, the result is more likely a TP. In the absence of fetal anomalies, it is most often an FP or X-chromosome variant.

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Bedei, I., Gehrke, T., Gloning, K. P., Meyer-Wittkopf, M., Willner, D., Krapp, M., … Axt-Fliedner, R. (2023). Multicenter clinical experience with non-invasive cell-free DNA screening for monosomy X and related X-chromosome variants. Prenatal Diagnosis, 43(2), 192–206. https://doi.org/10.1002/pd.6320

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