AI Article Synopsis

  • The study looked at whether prenatal exome sequencing (ES) could be useful for diagnosing neurocognitive disorders that lack clear prenatal signs.
  • Out of 138 patients studied, only about 23.75% showed detectable structural fetal abnormalities on ultrasound, with many not showing any identifiable prenatal signs.
  • The findings suggest that a significant number of neurocognitive disorders diagnosed after birth may not present noticeable prenatal features, indicating a potential gap in prenatal diagnostics that ES could fill.

Article Abstract

Objective: Prenatal exome sequencing (ES) is currently indicated for fetal malformations. Some neurocognitive genetic disorders may not have a prenatal phenotype. We assessed the prevalence of prenatally detectable phenotypes among patients with neurocognitive syndromes diagnosed postnatally by ES.

Methods: The medical files of a cohort of 138 patients diagnosed postnatally with a neurocognitive disorder using ES were reviewed for prenatal sonographic data. The Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM) database was searched for prenatally detectable phenotypes for all genes identified.

Results: Prenatal imaging data were available for 122 cases. Of these, 29 (23.75%) had fetal structural abnormalities and another 29 had other ultrasound abnormalities (fetal growth restriction, polyhydramnios, elevated nuchal translucency). In 30 patients, structural aberrations that were not diagnosed prenatally were detected at birth; in 21 (17.2%), the abnormalities could theoretically be detected prenatally by third-trimester/targeted scans. According to OMIM, 55.9% of the diagnosed genes were not associated with structural anomalies.

Conclusions: Most patients (52.5%) with postnatally diagnosed neurocognitive disorders did not have prenatal sonographic findings indicating prenatal ES should be considered. The prevalence of specific prenatal phenotypes such as fetal growth restriction and polyhydramnios in our cohort suggests that additional prenatal findings should be assessed as possible indications for prenatal ES.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9303252PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pd.6095DOI Listing

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