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Prenatal diagnosis with repetitive in situ hybridization probes
Authors:Roger V. Lebo  Robert R. Flandermeyer  Rony Diukman  Eric D. Lynch  Jacques A. Lepercq  Mitchell S. Golbus
Affiliation:Departments of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences and of Pediatrics, University of California, San Francisco, California
Abstract:We have used chromosome-specific repetitive sequences to detect the most common human aneuploidies prenatally. Together chromosome 21, 13, 18, X, and Y aneuploidy comprises 95% of the chromosome abnormalities that result in a high risk of abnormal phenotypes at birth. The X, Y, and 18 repetitive probes work reliably in multiple tissue types including directly examined and cultured amniocytes, chorionic villus cells, lymphocytes, and cultured fibroblasts. The probe that detects both chromosomes 13 and 21 routinely gives results in each cell type tested except directly studied amniocytes which can be interpreted in seven-ninths of the cases with protocol 1 and all tested samples with protocol 2. Our protocols diagnosed trisomy 21 in a 23-week fetus with low maternal serum AFP and a trisomy 18 in a direct chorionic villus sample 2 working days after the samples were obtained. Trisomy 21 also has been ruled out in a CVS karyotype first thought to be 47,XY,+21. These studies reflect the potential value of in situ hybridization to provide a more rapid, less expensive means to screen most at-risk fetal populations with less effort in first world cytogenetic laboratories, and to provide economical cytogenetic services in less developed countries. © 1992 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Keywords:prenatal diagnosis  in situ hybridization  repetitive DNA  cytogenetics
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