Prenatal diagnosis of 5p deletion syndrome: Report of five cases

It is difficult to prenatally identify 5p deletion (−) syndrome. Here, we report five cases of 5p‐ syndrome diagnosed by invasive prenatal diagnosis. Of them, three had a small cerebellum in the second trimester. In one case, a prominent renal pelvis and an absent nasal bone were also found in the f...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The journal of obstetrics and gynaecology research Vol. 45; no. 4; pp. 923 - 926
Main Authors: Mak, Annisa S. L., Ma, Teresa W. L., Chan, Kelvin Y. K., Kan, Anita S. Y., Tang, Mary H. Y., Leung, Kwok Y.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Kyoto, Japan John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd 01-04-2019
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Summary:It is difficult to prenatally identify 5p deletion (−) syndrome. Here, we report five cases of 5p‐ syndrome diagnosed by invasive prenatal diagnosis. Of them, three had a small cerebellum in the second trimester. In one case, a prominent renal pelvis and an absent nasal bone were also found in the first trimester. However, there were no abnormal ultrasound findings in the other two cases. Two cases had noninvasive prenatal testing and one showed a ‘5p‐ syndrome positive result’ because of reduced amount of cell‐free DNA in 5p. Two had combined first‐trimester screening performed where one had a high‐risk result for trisomy 18 and a low pregnancy‐associated plasma protein‐A level. Two cases of 5p‐ syndrome resulted from a parental balanced translocation. Prenatal diagnosis will only be made on invasive prenatal diagnosis for abnormal ultrasound findings with small cerebellum, abnormal prenatal screening or a parental reciprocal translocation involving 5p.
ISSN:1341-8076
1447-0756
DOI:10.1111/jog.13911