| Literature DB >> 32500103 |
Filipa Carvalho1,2, Céline Moutou3,4, Eftychia Dimitriadou5, Jos Dreesen6,7, Carles Giménez8, Veerle Goossens9, Georgia Kakourou10,11, Nathalie Vermeulen9, Daniela Zuccarello12, Martine De Rycke13,14.
Abstract
The field of preimplantation genetic testing (PGT) is evolving fast and best practice advice is essential for regulation and standardisation of diagnostic testing. The previous ESHRE guidelines on best practice for PGD, published in 2005 and 2011, are considered outdated, and the development of new papers outlining recommendations for good practice in PGT was necessary. The current paper provides recommendations on the technical aspects of PGT for monogenic/single-gene defects (PGT-M) and covers recommendations on basic methods for PGT-M and testing strategies. Furthermore, some specific recommendations are formulated for special cases, including de novo pathogenic variants, consanguineous couples, HLA typing, exclusion testing and disorders caused by pathogenic variants in the mitochondrial DNA. This paper is one of a series of four papers on good practice recommendations on PGT. The other papers cover the organisation of a PGT centre, embryo biopsy and tubing and the technical aspects of PGT for chromosomal structural rearrangements/aneuploidies. Together, these papers should assist scientists interested in PGT in developing the best laboratory and clinical practice possible.Entities:
Keywords: ESHRE; HLA; exclusion testing; good practice; mitochondrial DNA; monogenic disorders; pathogenic variants; preimplantation genetic testing
Year: 2020 PMID: 32500103 PMCID: PMC7257022 DOI: 10.1093/hropen/hoaa018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Reprod Open ISSN: 2399-3529
Figure 1Overview of the IVF/PGT process, and how all aspects are covered by one of the four recommendations papers. IVF: in vitro fertilisation, PGT: preimplantation genetic testing.
Figure 2Overview of the testing strategies that can be applied for PGT-M. PGT-M: PGT for monogenic/single-gene defects, PGT-A: PGT for aneuploidy, PGT-SR: PGT for chromosomal structural rearrangements, SNP: single nucleotide polymorphism, NGS: next-generation sequencing.
Example of short tandem repeat informativity results for an autosomal dominant disorder.
| Affected male partner | Unaffected female partner | Informativity | ADO detection in the embryo | Detection of maternal contamination | Additional info on monosomy/trisomy | Comments | Recommendation for PGT-M (ranking |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 124–126* | 120–122 | Fully informative | Yes | Yes | Yes | 4 distinctive parental alleles | Preferred marker (1) |
| 124–126* | 120–120 | Informative | Yes | No | Partially | 3 distinctive parental alleles, the affected partner is heterozygous, the unaffected partner is homozygous for a third allele. The wild-type allele is a unique allele. | Good marker (2) |
| 124–126* | 120–126 | Partially informative | Partially | Partially | Partially | 3 distinctive parental alleles, both partners are heterozygous, but the mutant allele of the affected partner is shared with an allele of the unaffected partner. The wild-type allele is a unique allele. Unaffected embryos (124–120 or 124–126) can be distinguished, as well as one genotype of affected embryos (126*-120). The second genotype of affected embryos is homozygous (126*-126), therefore it is uncertain if both paternal and maternal alleles are present. | Usable marker (3) |
| 124–126* | 126–126 | Partially informative | Partially | No | Partially | 2 distinctive parental alleles, the wild-type allele is a unique allele; the marker yields only information about the wild-type allele and is therefore limited in use | Usable marker (4) |
| 124–126* | 120–124 | Partially informative | Partially | Partially | Partially | 3 distinctive parental alleles, both partners are heterozygous, but the wild-type allele of the affected partner is shared by the unaffected partner. One genotype of unaffected embryos (124–120) can be distinguished from affected embryos (126*-120 or 126*-124); the second genotype of unaffected embryos is homozygous (124–124), therefore it is uncertain if both paternal and maternal alleles are present. | Usable marker (5) |
| 124–126* | 124–124 | Partially informative | Partially | No | Partially | 2 distinctive parental alleles, the mutant allele is a unique allele; the marker yields limited information about the mutant allele. | Usable marker (6) |
| 124–126* | 124–126 | Partially informative | Partially | No | No | 2 distinctive parental alleles, no unique alleles; the marker yields very limited information (to be used in combination with other markers) | Usable marker (7) |
| 126–126* | Any genotype | Non-informative | No information about the monogenic disorder but may yield information on parental contribution. | Not recommended |
1The utility of the markers is ranked from very good (1) to very low (7)
The pathogenic allele is indicated with * after validation of segregation analysis with a suitable reference.
ADO: allele drop-out, PGT-M: preimplantation genetic testing for monogenic/single-gene defects
Example of single nucleotide polymorphism informativity results for an autosomal dominant disorder.
| Affected male partner | Unaffected female partner | Informativity | ADO detection in the embryo | Detection of maternal contamination | Additional info on monosomy/trisomy | Comments | Recommendation for PGT-M (ranking |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A*B | AA | Informative | Partially | No | Partially | The wild-type allele is a unique allele, therefore unaffected embryos are heterozygous and can be distinguished | Preferred marker (1) |
| AB* | BB | ||||||
| AB* | AA | Informative | Partially | No | Partially | The mutant allele is a unique allele therefore unaffected embryos are homozygous; therefore, it is uncertain whether both paternal and maternal alleles are present | Usable marker (2) |
| A*B | BB | ||||||
| A*B or AB* | AB | Non-informative | No | No | No | The marker yields very limited information (to be used in combination with other markers) | Usable marker (3) |
| AA or BB | Any genotype | Non-informative | - | - | - | No information | Not recommended |
1The utility of the markers is ranked from very good (1) to very low (3)
The pathogenic allele is indicated with *after validation of segregation with a suitable reference.