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Prenatal diagnosis of chinese homozygous α‐thalassaemia 1 and haemoglobin H disease by analysis of α‐ and φζ‐globin genes in chorionic villi and amniocytes
Author(s) -
Ko TsangMing,
Hsieh FonJou,
Hsu PiMei,
Lee TzuYao
Publication year - 1989
Publication title -
prenatal diagnosis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.956
H-Index - 97
eISSN - 1097-0223
pISSN - 0197-3851
DOI - 10.1002/pd.1970091007
Subject(s) - chorionic villus sampling , amniocentesis , hydrops fetalis , prenatal diagnosis , chorionic villi , fetus , heterozygote advantage , hemoglobinopathy , medicine , thalassemia , pregnancy , buccal swab , obstetrics , biology , hemolytic anemia , genetics , gene , genotype
Abstract Eighty‐eight high‐risk pregnancies, 81 for homozygous α‐thalassaemia 1 and 7 for haemoglobin (Hb) H disease, were collected in this study. Chorionic villus sampling (CVS) was done in 63 cases and amniocentesis in 25 cases to obtain fetal cells. Southern blotting and DNA hybridization with α‐ and φζ‐globin gene probes were used to determine the α‐globin gene status. In two non‐informative families with non‐deletional mutations, DNA analysis failed to rule out the affected condition, and fetal blood sampling (FBS) and Hb electrophoresis were used for the final diagnosis. In the 81 fetuses at risk for homozygous α‐thalassaemia 1, 17 (13 by CVS and 4 by amniocentesis) were afffected, 30 were α‐thalassaemia 1 heterozygotes, 19 were normal, and the remaining 15 were either normal or heterozygous. In the seven fetuses at risk for Hb H disease, one was normal, three were α‐thalassaemia 1 heterozygotes, two were α‐thalassaemia 2 heterozygotes, and one was affected with Hb H disease and developed hydrops fetalis. DNA analysis on fetal cells enabled us to diagnose prenatally severe α‐thalassaemias, to prevent the birth of infants with Hb H disease, and to minimize maternal obstetrical complications from harbouring a fetus with Hb Bart's hydrops fetalis.