Abstract

In this report we have summarized our experience with the prenatal diagnosis of beta-thalassemia in 1000 pregnancies followed at least until 12 months after birth. In the majority of these cases, the thalassemia lesion was the nonsense mutation at the codon corresponding to amino acid 39, which produces the hematological phenotype of beta o-thalassemia. Fetal blood sampling was carried out by placental aspiration, by which a sufficient amount of fetal blood for analysis was obtained in the majority of cases (99 per cent). The fetal mortality associated with fetal blood sampling was 6.3 per cent. Those placental samples contaminated by maternal cells were successfully purified by Orskov lysis. Fetal blood was analysed by globin chain synthesis on CM-52 columns, which gave reliable results. Two misdiagnoses (0.2 per cent) have been made of which one was due to a non-globin protein co-migrating with the beta-chains while the other resulted from a misclassification of the type of thalassemia segregating in the family.

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