Prevalence of mosaicism in uncultured chorionic villus samples after chromosomal microarray and clinical outcome in pregnancies affected by confined placental mosaicism
Prenatal Diagnosis2019Vol. 40(2), pp. 244–259
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Ida Charlotte Bay Lund, Naja Becher, Rikke Christensen, Olav Bjørn Petersen, Ellen Hollands Steffensen, Else Marie Vestergaard, Ida Vogel
Abstract
Prevalence of mosaicism in CVS samples is higher after CMA on uncultured tissue than after conventional karyotyping on cultured tissue. The risk of TFM is equally high in cases of mosaicism for CNVs and whole chromosomes.
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