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Background: Liveborn infants with non-mosaic trisomy 22 are rarely described in the medical literature. Reported lifespan of these patients ranges from minutes to 3 years, with the absence of cardiac anomalies associated with longer-term survival. The landscape for offering cardiac surgery to patients with rare autosomal trisomies is currently evolving, as has been demonstrated recently in trisomies 13 and 18. However, limited available data on patients with rare autosomal trisomies provides a significant challenge in perinatal counseling, especially when there are options for surgical intervention.
Case Presentation: In this case report, we describe an infant born at term with prenatally diagnosed apparently non-mosaic trisomy 22 and multiple cardiac anomalies, including a double outlet right ventricle, hypoplastic aortic valve and severe aortic arch hypoplasia, who underwent cardiac surgery. The decisions made by her family lending to her progress and survival to this day were made with a focus on the shared decision making model and support in the prenatal and perinatal period. We also review the published data on survival and quality of life after cardiac surgery in infants with rare trisomies.
Conclusions: This patient is the only known case of apparently non-mosaic trisomy 22 in the literature who has undergone cardiac surgery with significant survival benefit. This case highlights the impact of using a shared decision making model when there is prognostic uncertainty.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12887-023-03949-8 | DOI Listing |
Genes (Basel)
June 2025
Greenwood Genetic Center, 101 Gregor Mendel Circle, Greenwood, SC 29646, USA.
Ring chromosomes (RCs) can be rare or common depending on the chromosome involved. With interest in the historical RCs identified by our laboratory, we curated instances to provide further information to this research field. : We carried out a retrospective, single-center study of constitutional RCs identified starting in the late 1980s.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Chem
July 2025
Victorian Clinical Genetics Services, Murdoch Children's Research Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Background: Confined placental mosaicism can cause false-positive prenatal cell-free DNA (cfDNA) screening results, thereby reducing the positive predictive value (PPV) of the test. We sought to investigate how PPVs for the common fetal trisomies can be refined based on the presence or absence of chromosomal mosaicism in cfDNA sequencing data.
Methods: The study cohort included singleton pregnancies tested between March 2019 and December 2021.
Am J Med Genet A
August 2025
Shodair Children's Hospital, Helena, Montana, USA.
Non-mosaic trisomy 9 (NMTS9) is a rarely described chromosomal abnormality because most affected pregnancies result in first trimester spontaneous abortions, although survival to delivery is possible. In contrast, the phenotypic features of mosaic trisomy 9 have been well described in the literature as these individuals can survive to birth and beyond. Therefore, a better understanding of the phenotypic spectrum of NMTS9 is needed to provide appropriate perinatal counseling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet
July 2025
Department of Pathology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia, USA.
People with mosaicism for trisomy 21 have been shown to exhibit many of the same phenotypic traits present in people with non-mosaic Down syndrome, but with varying symptom severity. However, the behavioral phenotype of people with mosaic Down syndrome (mDS) has not been well characterized. This study aimed to examine the prevalence of self-report and caregiver-report symptoms of depression and anxiety among a sample of 62 participants with mDS aged 12-46 and assess their association with the percentage of trisomy 21 in blood and/or buccal mucosa cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFForensic Sci Int Genet
January 2025
Instituto de Investigação e Inovação em Saúde (i3S), Universidade do Porto, Portugal; Instituto de Patologia e Imunologia Molecular da Universidade do Porto (IPATIMUP), Portugal; Centro de Matemática da Universidade do Porto (CMUP), Portugal.
The unique features of the X chromosome can be crucial to complement autosomal profiling or to disentangle complex kinship problems, providing in some cases a similar or even greater power than autosomes in paternity/maternity investigations. While theoretical and informatics approaches for pairwise X-linked kinship analyses are well established for euploid individuals, these are still lacking for individuals with an X chromosome aneuploidy. To trigger the fulfilment of this gap, this research presents a mathematical framework that enables the quantification of DNA evidence in pairwise kinship analyses, involving two non-inbred individuals, one of whom with a non-mosaic X chromosome aneuploidy: Trisomy X (47, XXX), Klinefelter (47, XXY) or Turner (45, X0) syndrome.
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