Abstract:Background: The occurrence of a discordant chromosomal abnormality in monozygotic twins is an extremely rare condition. Case: We report the prenatal sonographic findings and cytogenetic studies in a monochorionic twin pregnancy discordant for severe fetal anomalies. Amniocenteses demonstrated heterokaryotypia for trisomy 13 in monozygotic twins. The pregnancy was managed conservatively, resulting in the delivery of discordant twins at 32 weeks. The structurally normal twin survived without sequelae, but the ab… Show more
“…Previous literature reports include monozygous twins discordant for monosomy 21 2 in one case, trisomy 21 [3][4][5][6] in four cases and trisomy 13 7,8 in two cases.…”
“…Previous literature reports include monozygous twins discordant for monosomy 21 2 in one case, trisomy 21 [3][4][5][6] in four cases and trisomy 13 7,8 in two cases.…”
“…Although no invasive antenatal testing was done, postnatal karyotyping confirmed trisomy 13 in the affected twin but normal chromosome complement in Twin B 2 . In at least seven of the subsequent nine cases [3][4][5][6][7][8][9] (details unavailable from Vojtěch et al, 11 amniocentesis of both sacs was performed (at gestational ages ranging from 13 + 6 to 23 weeks) and confirmed discordant karyotypes, with one twin affected by trisomy 13 and the other with normal karyotype. Uniquely in this series, our patient decided against amniocentesis prior to selective reduction: given the obvious severity of the affected twin's abnormalities, the result would not have altered her decision for selective termination but would have risked miscarriage of the unaffected twin.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…10 In the other six cases, the unaffected cotwin survived,gestational age at delivery ranged from 32 + 2 to 40 weeks, with only one unaffected cotwin delivered before 36 weeks. 6 Three cases were managed expectantly (one only diagnosed at 25 weeks so termination not offered, 4 one case from Chile where termination is illegal under all circumstances, 8 and one in which termination was offered but declined. 7 One of these resulted in loss of both twins as discussed above, 4 the other two both resulted in delivery at 32 weeks with neonatal death of the affected twin and survival of the unaffected cotwin.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Spontaneous "rescue" chromosome loss in an initially trisomic zygote. 3,[5][6][7][8] Both mitotic error and trisomic rescue can give rise to uniparental disomy and mosaicism. 3,[5][6][7][8]10 Uniparental disomy may lead to phenotypic abnormalities if the chromosome involved has a high proportion of imprinted genes, but as noted by Ramsey et al, four cases of paternal and one case of maternal uniparental disomy for chromosome 13 have been reported, all with normal phenotypes.…”
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“…5,6 There are only four reports of monochorionic twins discordant for trisomy 13. [6][7][8][9] The mechanism of occurrence of monozygotic twins has been discussed by various authors, 4,10 but little is known about the mechanisms underlying heterokaryotypic twinning. Parent of origin studies in our case indicated maternal origin of the trisomic chromosome.…”
The diagnosis and management of a heterokaryotypic monochorionic pregnancy, in which one of twins had trisomy 13, is presented. Monozygosity and discordant karyotypes were confirmed by amniocentesis of both the sacs. Radiofrequency ablation of the trisomic twin was successfully performed at 18-weeks gestation and the pregnancy ended at term with the birth of a healthy girl who remains well on follow-up at 12 months of age. We reiterate the importance of early amniocentesis of both the sacs in the presence of discordant fetal abnormalities and consideration of selective fetal termination to optimise the outcome of heterokaryotypic monochorionic twin pregnancies.
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