| Literature DB >> 30187425 |
Malou Heijligers1,2, Aafke van Montfoort3,4, Madelon Meijer-Hoogeveen5, Frank Broekmans5, Katelijne Bouman6, Irene Homminga7, Jos Dreesen8,3, Aimee Paulussen8,3, John Engelen8, Edith Coonen8,4, Vyne van der Schoot8, Marieke van Deursen-Luijten8, Nienke Muntjewerff8, Andrea Peeters9, Ron van Golde4, Mark van der Hoeven10, Yvonne Arens8, Christine de Die-Smulders8,3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: We aim to evaluate the safety of PGD. We focus on the congenital malformation rate and additionally report on adverse perinatal outcome.Entities:
Keywords: Children; Congenital malformations; Follow-up; Perinatal outcome; Preimplantation genetic diagnosis
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30187425 PMCID: PMC6240547 DOI: 10.1007/s10815-018-1286-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Assist Reprod Genet ISSN: 1058-0468 Impact factor: 3.412
Couple, treatment, and child characteristics
| Mean maternal age (years + SD) | 32.3 ± 3.7 |
| Mean paternal age (years + SD) | 35.2 ± 4.5 |
| Number of clinical pregnancies | 439 |
| Mode of inheritance in PGD pregnancies | |
| Autosomal dominant | 172/439 (39.1%) |
| Chromosomal | 121/439 (27.6%) |
| X-linked | 77/439 (17.5%) |
| Autosomal recessive | 65/439 (14.8%) |
| Mitochondrial | 4/439 (0.9%) |
| Nulliparous | 245/439 (55.8%) |
| Cycle order in which pregnancy was achieved | |
| 1 | 234/439 (53.3%) |
| 2 | 124/439 (28.2%) |
| 3 | 74/439 (16.9%) |
| 4 | 7/439 (1.6%) |
| Pregnancy after transfer of frozen-thawed embryo(s) | 41/439 (9.3%) |
| Method of fertilization | |
| IVF | 136/439 (31.0%) |
| ICSI | 303/439 (69.0%) |
| Genetic analysis technique | |
| PCR | 255/439 (58.1%) |
| FISH | 181/439 (41.2%) |
| Array-CGH | 3/439 (0.7%) |
| Number of blastomeres biopsied per embryo | |
| 1 | 321/649 (49.5%) |
| 2 | 328/649 (50.5%) |
| Number of embryos transferred | |
| 1 | 241/439 (54.9%) |
| 2 | 197/439 (44.9%) |
| 3 | 1/439 (0.2%) |
| Number of children | 364a |
| Boys | 165 (45.3%) |
| Girls | 199 (54.7%) |
| Singleton or multiple | |
| Singleton | 263 (72.3%) |
| Twin | 88 (24.2%) |
| Triplet | 13 (3.6%) |
aTwo children were lost to follow-up
Congenital malformations, misdiagnosis, and genetic testing in PGD children and pregnancies
| Live born | |
| Major malformations | 9 (2.5%) |
| Multiple malformations | 4 (1.1%) |
| Trisomy 21 | 1 |
| Mosaic trisomy 9 | 1 (one of a twin) |
| ASD, cleft lip, hydronephrosis | 1 |
| Unilateral facial nerve paresis, microtia | 1 |
| Single malformation | 5 (1.4%) |
| Bilateral hydronephrosis | 1 |
| Duodenal web | 1 (one of a twin) |
| Hypospadia | 1 |
| Congenital heart disease | 2 |
| Minor malformations | 5 (1.4%) |
| Sacral dimple | 2 |
| Umbilical hernia | 2 (dizygotic twin) |
| Inguinal hernia | 1 |
| Total | 14 (3.8%) |
| Pregnancies | |
| Still birth | 1 (0.2%) |
| Acardia | 1 (one of a triplet) |
| Pregnancy terminations | 3 (0.7%) |
| Exencephaly | 1 |
| Trisomy 18 | 1 |
| Trisomy 21 | 1 |
| Genetic testing | |
| Non-viable fetus/stillbirth | 3 |
| 8 weeks and 5 days gestational age | 1 (trisomy 16) |
| 8 weeks and 6 days gestational age | 1 (misdiagnosis)b |
| 37 weeks gestational age | 1 (balanced karyotype)c |
| Prenatal tests | 26/439 (5.9%) |
| Confirmation PGD diagnosis | 9 (all confirmed) |
| Abnormalities on ultrasound | 3 (one trisomy 18, others normal) |
| Maternal age | 6 (all normal) |
| Increased risk combined test | 3 (one trisomy 21, others normal) |
| Gender testing XL disorder | 5 (all girls) |
| Postnatal tests in the neonatal period | 16/364 (4.4%) |
| Confirmation PGD diagnosis | 13 (all confirmed) |
| Congenital malformations | 3 (one mosaicism trisomy 9; one trisomy 21; one normal) |
aTwo children were lost to follow-up and therefore excluded; b[24]; cIntra uterine fetal death
Birth parameters, perinatal mortality, and hospital admissions
| Total | Singletons | Twins | Triplets | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | 364 | 263 (72.3%) | 88 (24.2%) | 13 (3.6%) |
| Term (mean in weeks) | 38.6 | 39.2 | 36.3 | 34.1 |
| Premature (< 37 weeks) | 63 (17.3%) | 20 (7.6%) | 35 (39.8%) | 8 (61.5%) |
| Very premature (< 32 weeks) | 8 (2.2%) | – | 8 (9.1%) | – |
| Birth weighta | ||||
| Median in grams | 3280 | 3462 | 2640 | 1900 |
| Mean in grams (SD) | 3199 (± 699) | 3450 (± 533) | 2554 (± 610) | 2148 (± 696) |
| Mean | 0.17 | |||
| Low birth weight (< 2500 g) | 52 (14.3%) | 10 (3.8%) | 31 (36.9%) | 9 (69.2%) |
| Very low birth weight (< 1500 g) | 9 (2.5%) | 1 (0.4%) | 8 (9.5%) | – |
| Perinatal mortality | 3 (0.7%) | 1 (0.3%) | 1 (0.3%) | 1 (0.3%) |
| Hospital admission | 67 (18.4%) | 36 (9.9%) | 25 (6.9%) | 8 (2.2%) |
| Low birth weight | 28 (7.7%) | |||
| < 37 weeks | 34 (9.3%) |
aData on birth weight were missing of five children
bWeight of the individual child minus the mean weight of children of mothers being nulliparous or multiparous as well, who have the same gender and ethnical background and were born at the same gestational age within a reference population, divided by standard deviation (PRN Foundation, 2013). References only available for singletons
SD, standard deviation