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On the road to replacing invasive testing with cell‐based NIPT: Five clinical cases with aneuploidies, microduplication, unbalanced structural rearrangement, or mosaicism
Author(s) -
Vestergaard Else Marie,
Singh Ripudaman,
Schelde Palle,
Hatt Lotte,
Ravn Katarina,
Christensen Rikke,
Lildballe Dorte Launholt,
Petersen Olav Bjørn,
Uldbjerg Niels,
Vogel Ida
Publication year - 2017
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.5150
Subject(s) - aneuploidy , comparative genomic hybridization , fetus , prenatal diagnosis , andrology , chorionic villi , copy number variation , gene duplication , biology , trophoblast , medicine , obstetrics , pregnancy , genetics , genome , gene , chromosome , placenta
Objective Trophoblastic fetal cells harvested from maternal blood have the capacity to be used for copy number analyses in a cell‐based non‐invasive prenatal test (cbNIPT). Potentially, this will result in increased resolution for detection of subchromosomal aberrations due to high quality DNA not intermixed with maternal DNA. We present 5 selected clinical cases from first trimester pregnancies where cbNIPT was used to demonstrate a wide range of clinically relevant aberrations. Method Blood samples were collected from high risk pregnancies in gestational week 12 + 1 to 12 + 5. Fetal trophoblast cells were enriched and stained using fetal cell specific antibodies. The enriched cell fraction was scanned, and fetal cells were picked using a capillary‐based cell picking instrument. Subsequently, whole genome amplification (WGA) was performed on fetal cells, and the DNA was analyzed blindly by array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH). Results We present 5 cases where non‐invasive cell‐based prenatal test results are compared with aCGH results on chorionic villus samples (CVS), demonstrating aneuploidies including mosaicism, unbalanced translocations, subchromosomal deletions, or duplications. Conclusion Aneuploidy and subchromosomal aberrations can be detected using fetal cells harvested from maternal blood. The method has the future potential of being offered as a cell‐based NIPT with large high genomic resolution.