L. Strain et al., PRENATAL-DIAGNOSIS OF FRAGILE-X-SYNDROME - MANAGEMENT OF THE MALE FETUS WITH A PREMUTATION, Prenatal diagnosis, 14(6), 1994, pp. 469-474
Direct detection of the fragile X mutation by DNA analysis has greatly
simplified prenatal diagnosis of this disease. However, women carryin
g a fragile X premutation may pass their expanded trinucleotide repeat
to sons without expansion to a full mutation. Such sons are predicted
to be intellectually normal. In this situation, the accuracy with whi
ch the fetal status can be inferred from analysis of chorionic villus
sample (CVS) DNA is unclear. We describe such a case, in which it was
felt necessary to proceed to fetal blood sampling despite technically
unambiguous DNA results from the CVS. The lack of prospective data mea
ns that this dilemma may be expected to recur over the next few years
when performing prenatal diagnosis on fragile X premutation carriers.