AI Article Synopsis

  • Trisomy 18, also known as Edwards' Syndrome, is the second most common autosomal trisomy, primarily caused by nondisjunction related to advanced maternal age, leading to high mortality rates, especially in female fetuses.
  • The evaluation process for identifying T18 involves a three-step approach: first trimester screening for fetal aneuploidy, searching for fetal DNA in maternal blood, and finally using invasive techniques for diagnosis.
  • Increased survival rates for infants with T18 have shifted the focus of prenatal counseling from solely comfort care to discussing management options, emphasizing the need for personalized counseling and comparative analysis of ultrasound and autopsy findings.

Article Abstract

Identified by the eponym "Edwards' Syndrome," trisomy 18 (T18) represents the second most common autosomal trisomy after T21. The pathophysiology underlying the extra chromosome 18 is a nondisjunction error, mainly linked with the advanced maternal age. More frequent in female fetuses, the syndrome portends high mortality, reaching a rate of 80% of miscarriages or stillbirths. The three-step evaluation includes first trimester screening for fetal aneuploidy using a combination of maternal age, fetal nuchal translucency thickness, fetal heart rate and maternal serum free ß-hCG and PAPP-A; followed by the research for fragments of fetal DNA in maternal blood; and, finally, invasive techniques leave to the established diagnosis. Starting with the first trimester scan, selected ultrasound findings should be investigated to define not only the impact of the genetic problem on the fetus, but also to address the prenatal counseling. Previous series underline that T18 is not uniformly lethal. An active dialogue on the choices in the management of infants with T18 has emerged, sustained by the transition from the comfort care to the intervention attitude. Survival rates for individuals with supposedly fatal conditions have increased. In this novel scenario, an ad hoc counseling is pivotal. To support it, a comparative analysis by pictorial assays between ultrasound and autopsy findings could be beneficial. We provide an illustrative tool from a clinical case managed in early second trimester, with the purpose to strive a balanced approach in the hard choice faced by couples of fetuses with T18.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00404-021-06130-7DOI Listing

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