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Pregnancy outcomes of fetuses with congenital heart disease after a prenatal diagnosis with chromosome microarray

Zhu Zhang, Ting Hu, Jiamin Wang, Rui Hu, Qinqin Li, Like Xiao, Na Liao, Zhushu Liu, He Wang, Shanling Liu

2021Prenatal Diagnosis18 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the pregnancy outcomes of fetuses with congenital heart disease (CHD) after chromosome microarray (CMA)-based prenatal diagnosis. METHOD: Amniocentesis was performed in 1035 pregnant women carrying fetuses with CHD between September 2014 and December 2019. Chromosomal aberrations in fetuses with CHD were evaluated using CMA. The pregnancy outcomes were followed up from 6 months to 5 years. RESULTS: The overall CHD detection rate by CMA was 10.1% (105/1035; 50 fetuses: aneuploidy, 55 fetuses: pathogenic or likely pathogenic copy number variations). Among 1003 fetuses who were followed up, 4, 236, 763, and 18 cases were of miscarriages, pregnancy termination, live births, and postnatal deaths, respectively. Self-healed CHD was observed in 401 (52.6%) fetuses. The pregnancy termination rate of fetuses with chromosomal anomalies was significantly higher than that of fetuses without chromosomal anomalies (93.1% vs. 15.5%, p < 0.001). However, other pregnancy outcomes, including mortality, preterm labor, and low-weight birth rate, were similar between the two groups. CONCLUSION: The outcome of CMA is an important factor influencing parents' choice of whether to continue the pregnancy. Self-healing rate of prenatal diagnosed CHD is high. The mortality and morbidity of fetuses with CHD following prenatal CMA testing are relatively low.

Topics & Concepts

PregnancyFetusMedicineAmniocentesisObstetricsAneuploidyPrenatal diagnosisChromosomeBiologyGeneticsGenePrenatal Screening and DiagnosticsCardiovascular Issues in PregnancyAssisted Reproductive Technology and Twin Pregnancy