npj Genomic Medicine (Sep 2024)

Prenatal diagnosis for neurofibromatosis type 1 and the pitfalls of germline mosaics

  • Laurence Pacot,
  • Dominique Vidaud,
  • Manuela Ye,
  • Albain Chansavang,
  • Audrey Coustier,
  • Theodora Maillard,
  • Cécile Barbance,
  • Ingrid Laurendeau,
  • Bérénice Hébrard,
  • Ariane Lunati-Rozie,
  • Benoît Funalot,
  • Pierre Wolkenstein,
  • Michel Vidaud,
  • Alice Goldenberg,
  • Fanny Morice-Picard,
  • Djihad Hadjadj,
  • Béatrice Parfait,
  • Eric Pasmant

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41525-024-00425-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract We report our 5-year experience in neurofibromatosis type 1 prenatal diagnosis (PND): 205 PNDs in 146 women (chorionic villus biopsies, 88% or amniocentesis, 12%). The NF1 variant was present in 85 (41%) and absent in 122 (59%) fetuses. Among 205 pregnancies (207 fetuses), 135 were carried to term (119 unaffected and 16 NF1 affected children), 69 pregnancy terminations (affected fetuses), 2 miscarriages, and 1 in utero death. The majority of PND requests came from parents with sporadic NF1. We describe two PNDs in women with mosaic NF1. In both families, direct PND showed the absence of the maternal NF1 variant in the fetus. However, microsatellite markers analysis showed that the risk haplotype had been transmitted. These rare cases of germline mosaicism illustrate the pitfall of indirect PND. Our study illustrates the crucial consequences of PND for medical and genetic counseling decisions. We also point to the challenges of germline mosaics.