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. 2021 Jan 27:14:345-355.
doi: 10.2147/RMHP.S286001. eCollection 2021.

SNP Array as a Tool for Prenatal Diagnosis of Congenital Heart Disease Screened by Echocardiography: Implications for Precision Assessment of Fetal Prognosis

Affiliations

SNP Array as a Tool for Prenatal Diagnosis of Congenital Heart Disease Screened by Echocardiography: Implications for Precision Assessment of Fetal Prognosis

Hailong Huang et al. Risk Manag Healthc Policy. .

Abstract

Objective: This study aimed to examine the effectiveness of the SNP array for the prenatal diagnosis of congenital heart disease (CHD) screened by echocardiography.

Patients and methods: A total of 356 pregnant women with fetal congenital heart malformations revealed by echocardiography at the Center for Prenatal Diagnosis of Fujian Maternal and Children Hospital during the period from November 2016 through July 2019 were recruited. The fetuses were assigned into three cohorts, including 142 with a single cardiac malformation, 106 with multiple cardiac malformations and 108 with cardiac and extracardiac malformations. All fetuses underwent chromosomal karyotyping and SNP array simultaneously, and the effectiveness of the SNP array for the prenatal diagnosis of CHD was evaluated.

Results: The overall prevalence of abnormal karyotypes was 9.3% among the 356 fetuses with CHD, and a higher proportion was found in fetuses with cardiac and extracardiac malformations (18.5%) than in those with single (5.6%) or multiple cardiac malformations (4.7%) (P<0.05). Consistent with karyotype analysis, SNP array detected an additional 25 fetuses with pathogenic copy number variations (CNVs), seven with variant of unknown significance (VOUS) and seven with benign CNVs, and a lower proportion of abnormal CNV was found in fetuses with a single cardiac malformation (4.2%) than in those with multiple cardiac malformations (9.4%) or cardiac and extracardiac malformations (14.8%) (P<0.05). Among the 33 fetuses with chromosomal abnormality, postnatal follow-up showed termination of pregnancy in 25 with pathogenic CNVs, one with VOUS, and six with normal karyotypes and SNP array findings but severe multiple malformations by ultrasonography.

Conclusion: SNP array increases the overall detection of abnormal CNVs by 9%, which improves the detection of CNVs associated with CHD. SNP array may serve as a tool for prenatal diagnosis of CHD that facilitates the discovery of pathogenic genes associated with CHD and provide valuable insights into the precision assessment of fetal prognosis during the prenatal counseling.

Keywords: SNP array; congenital heart disease; echocardiography; prenatal diagnosis.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors report no conflicts of interest in this work.

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