Abstract

Steroid 21-hydroxylase deficiency (21-OHD) accounts for 90–95% of congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) cases. It is classified into three distinct clinical phenotypes: the salt-wasting (SW), simple virilizing (SV) and nonclassical forms (NC). As girls with the SW and SV forms of 21-OHD are exposed to high systemic levels of adrenal androgens during fetal life, they show genital ambiguity. To ameliorate the degree of genital virilization, prenatal dexamethasone treatment has been performed for more than two decades, although mainly in the USA and Europe. This treatment has proven to be effective in preventing or reducing genital virilization. Some data also show that prenatal diagnosis and treatment are safe for the mother and fetus. However, prenatal treatment is still controversial for the following reasons. First, the risk of having an affected female fetus is only one in eight when both parents are known carriers of the autosomal recessive trait. Therefore, seven of eight fetuses will receive dexamethasone unnecessarily, and this raises ethical questions. Furthermore, maternal side effects such as excessive weight gain and hypertension have been observed. Finally, the long-term safety and outcome for dexamethasone-exposed children have not been established. In Japan, prenatal diagnosis and treatment has rarely been reported because of these reasons. Therefore, we must be cautious, and this treatment should be carried out in special centers with the approval of their ethical committees, that are capable of performing chorionic villus sampling (CVS) and subsequently determining the karyotype and genotype of 21-OHD.

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