The clinical significance of trisomy 20 mosaicism detected prenatally remains uncertain due to the rarity of liveborn cases with inconsistent clinical findings, and lack of long-term follow-up and outcome. We describe a case of true trisomy 20 mosaicism in a liveborn girl with maternal uniparental isodisomy of chromosome 20 in the diploid blood cells. Trisomy 20 mosaicism was originally detected in amniotic fluid (98%) and was confirmed in the term placenta (100%), as well as in the blood (10%) and urine sediment (100%) of the neonate.
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