| Literature DB >> 28449669 |
Norbert Gleicher1,2,3,4, Jacob Metzger5, Gist Croft6, Vitaly A Kushnir7,8, David F Albertini7,6, David H Barad7,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It has become increasingly apparent that the trophectoderm (TE) at blastocyst stage is much more mosaic than has been appreciated. Whether preimplantation genetic screening (PGS), utilizing a single TE biopsy (TEB), can reliably determine embryo ploidy has, therefore, increasingly been questioned in parallel.Entities:
Keywords: In vitro fertilization; Mathematical model; Premplantation genetic screening; Trophectoderm biopsy
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28449669 PMCID: PMC5408377 DOI: 10.1186/s12958-017-0251-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Biol Endocrinol ISSN: 1477-7827 Impact factor: 5.211
Fig. 1Schematics of PGS. The currently in use PGS procedure (PGS 2.0) is based on a single TEB of on average approximately 6 cells, which is alleged to accurately reflect the chromosomal status of the developing embryo/fetus. The procedure has entered worldwide clinical use without prior clinical validation. Three crucial questions (unresolved issues in the figure) still require resolution. This manuscript attempts to answer the first of these questions, whether a single TEB accurately enough reflects the whole TE to discriminate between embryos that can undergo transfer and those that should be discarded
PGDIS Recommendations for PGS laboratories [15]
| 1. For reliable detection of mosaicism, ideally 5 cells should be biopsied, with as little cell damage as possible. If the biopsy is facilitated using a laser, the identified contact points should be minimal and preferably at cell junctions. Overly aggressive use of the laser may result in cell damage and partial destruction of cellular DNA. |
| 2. Only a validated Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) platform that can quantitatively measure copy numbers should be used for measurement of mosaicism in the biopsy sample. Ideally, a NGS methodology that can accurately and reproducibly measure 20% mosaicism in a known sample. |
| 3. For reporting embryo results, the suggested cut-off point for definition of mosaicism is >20%, so lower levels should be treated as normal (euploid), > 80% abnormal (aneuploid), and the remaining ones between 20 and 80% mosaic (euploid-aneuploid mosaics). |
PGDIS recommendations for the clinician [15]
| 1. Patients should continue to be advised that any genetic test based on sampling one or small number of cells biopsied from preimplantation embryos cannot be 100% accurate for a combination of technical and biological factors, including chromosome mosaicism. |
| 2. The patient information and consent forms for aneuploidy testing (if used) should be modified to include the possibility of mosaic aneuploid results and any potential risks in the event of transfer and implantation. This needs to be explained to patients by the clinician recommending the aneuploidy testing. |
| 3. Transfer of blastocysts with a normal euploid result should always be prioritized over those with mosaic aneuploid results. |
| 4. In the event of considering the transfer of a blastocyst with only mosaic aneuploidies, the following options should be discussed with the patient: |
| a. A further cycle of IVF with aneuploidy testing to increase the chance of identifying a normal euploid blastocyst for transfer |
| b. Transfer of a blastocyst with mosaic aneuploidies for low risk chromosomes only, after appropriate genetic counseling if available |
| c. Appropriate monitoring and prenatal diagnosis of any resulting pregnancy, preferably by early amniocentesis (14 weeks gestation). |
PGDIS guidelines to prioritize mosaic embryos for transfer [15]
| Based on our current knowledge of the reproductive outcomes of fetal and placental mosaicism from prenatal diagnosis, the following can be used as a guide by the clinician (or a genetic counselor if available) when a mosaic embryo is being considered for transfer: |
| 1. Embryos showing mosaic euploid/monosomy or mosaic euploid/ monosomy are preferable to euploid/trisomy, given that monosomic embryos (excepting 45, X) are not viable |
| 2. If a decision is made to transfer mosaic embryos trisomic for a single chromosome, one can prioritize selection based on the level of mosaicism and the specific chromosome involved |
| a. The preferable transfer category consists of mosaic embryos trisomic for chromosomes 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 17, 19, 20, 22, X, Y. None of these chromosomes involve the adverse characteristics enumerated belowb. |
| b. Embryos mosaic for trisomies that are associated with potential for uniparental disomy are of lesser priority |
| c. Embryos mosaic for trisomies that are associated with intrauterine growth retardation (chromosomes 2, 7, 16) are of lesser priority. |
| d. Embryos mosaic for trisomies capable of liveborn viability (chromosomes 13, 18, 21) are for obvious reasons of lowest priority |
Fig. 2P-values for observing no mosaicism, given different hypotheses r and a threshold of 0,05 (dotted line). With the curve crossing the significance line (P = 0.05) at 0.6, the figure demonstrates that any value of r larger than 60% euploid cells leads to a P-value that is larger than the usual significance level of 5% (indicated as a dashed line in the figure), meaning that even the hypothesis that there are 40% aneuploid cells in the embryo cannot be rejected when not observing any aneuploid cells in the biopsy
Fig. 3P-values for observed mosaicism, given different hypotheses r, and varying numbers of abnormal-aneuploid cells in biopsy. The curves demonstrate that, even when obtaining a mosaic TEB, with decreasing aneuploidy cell numbers in the TEB (from 6 to 1), any explanation with increasing r from r < 0.4 to r < 0.99 could be a reasonable explanation of the observed data since it leads to observing mosaicism in >5% of cases. The threshold at which r crosses the significance level increases with decreasing aneuploidy. This means that a given r is more likely to explain the obtained biopsy result the lower the measured aneuploidy is. For example, if one (or more) cells are aneuploid, the threshold will be approximately r = 0.99, meaning that even a hypothesis of r = 0.99, basically an entirely euploid embryo, is compatible with the data. On the other hand, if three (or more) cells are aneuploid, a hypothesis with an r as high 0.99 is too unlikely to give the observed data, and only an r < 0.85 hypothesis is compatible with this biopsy outcome