Maternal Sex Chromosome Aneuploidy Identified through Noninvasive Prenatal Screening: Clinical Profile and Patient Experience

Am J Perinatol. 2023 Aug 9. doi: 10.1055/a-2126-7476. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Objective: Noninvasive prenatal screening (NIPS) may incidentally identify maternal aneuploidies that have health implications. We evaluated patients' experience with counseling and follow-up diagnostic testing after NIPS flags a potential maternal sex chromosome aneuploidy (SCA).

Study design: Patients who underwent NIPS at two reference laboratories between 2012 and 2021 and had test results that were consistent with possible or probable maternal SCA were contacted with a link to an anonymous survey. Survey topics included demographics, health history, pregnancy history, counseling, and follow-up testing.

Results: A total of 269 patients responded to the anonymous survey, and 83 of these individuals also completed one follow-up survey. Most received pretest counseling. A total of 80% were offered fetal genetic testing during the pregnancy, and 35% of patients completed diagnostic maternal testing. Monosomy X-related phenotypes such as short stature or hearing loss prompted follow-up testing that led to a diagnosis of monosomy X in 14 (6%) cases.

Conclusion: Follow-up counseling and testing after a high-risk NIPS result suggestive of maternal SCA is heterogenous in this cohort and may be frequently incomplete. Health outcomes may be affected by these results and additional research could improve the provision, delivery, and quality of posttest counseling.

Key points: · NIPS results showing potential SCA could have maternal health implications.. · Variations in counseling and testing after NIPS were observed for women with suspected SCA.. · Comprehensive counseling and diagnostic testing strategies are critical for these patients..