“…In the Cochrane database, the spontaneous miscarriage rate after amniocentesis in singleton gestations spans between 0.13% and 0.33%, while there are no data for twin gestations (Alfirevic et al, 2017). The risk of pregnancy loss in twin gestations reported in the last 20 years varies from 0% to 4.2% (Antsaklis et al, 2002;Cahill et al, 2009;Chen et al, 2020;Daskalakis et al, 2009;Dechnunthapiphat et al, 2020;Kalogiannidis et al, 2011;Kan et al, 2012;Kim et al, 2019;Krispin et al, 2019;Lenis-Cordoba et al, 2013;Millaire et al, 2006;Simonazzi et al, 2010;Sperling et al, 2019;Supadilokluck et al, 2009;Toth-Pal et al, 2004;Yukobowich et al, 2001). One recent systematic review demonstrated that the pooled pregnancy loss rate before 24 weeks and within 4 weeks after the amniocentesis procedure in twin pregnancies were 2.1% and 2.1%, respectively, which were as high as the background risk in twin pregnancy without undergoing the procedure (Di Mascio et al, 2020).…”