Abstract
BackgroundThe 3q duplication syndrome is a result of duplication of a large fragment of the long arm of chromosome 3, mainly 3q21-qter, and in most cases it is diagnosed only after birth. The phenotypic consequences resulting from genetic imbalance are an important source of information for genetic counselling, especially in prenatal diagnostics. However, in most cases it is impossible to define them precisely because the final clinical presentation is a result of an overlap, usually due to different sizes of deletions and/or duplications not only chromosome 3 but also of translocation partner chromosome. In this article, we present a prenatal diagnosis of the 3q duplication syndrome in a foetus, arising from a balanced insertion ins (7,3)(q21.2;q12.3q29) carried by the mother.Case presentationThe article presents a case of a 29-year-old woman referred to the Genetic Outpatient Clinic for consultation in the 12th week of her fifth pregnancy with a diagnosis of generalised hydrops foetalis. The analysis of karyotype using GTG technique and FISH allowed diagnosis of a balanced aberration in the mother, and determined the type of chromosomal rearrangement, which allowed the identification of the origin of the additional genetic material in the foetus and the previous malformed child of the same couple. The use of molecular karyotyping techniques (FISH and aCGH) allowed a precise determination of the size of the imbalanced fragments in the affected siblings.ConclusionsThe aCGH technique is particularly valuable for the diagnostics of submicroscopic deletions and duplications, if no imbalanced chromosomal aberrations are detected by routine cytogenetic tests. It is also a valuable technique for identifying and fully characterizing genetic material of unknown origin, which can’t be identified using routine cytogenetic techniqes. However, it does not allow identification of balanced aberrations in carriers.
Highlights
The 3q duplication syndrome is a result of duplication of a large fragment of the long arm of chromosome 3, mainly 3q21-qter, and in most cases it is diagnosed only after birth
The array Comparative Genomic Hybridization (aCGH) technique is valuable for the diagnostics of submicroscopic deletions and duplications, if no imbalanced chromosomal aberrations are detected by routine cytogenetic tests
The phenotypic consequences resulting from genetic imbalance are an important source of information for genetic counselling, especially in prenatal diagnostics
Summary
The 3q duplication syndrome is a result of duplication of a large fragment of the long arm of chromosome 3, mainly 3q21-qter, and in most cases it is diagnosed only after birth. Chromosomal abnormalities causing genomic imbalance are a major cause of congenital developmental defects and intellectual disability They arise de novo or as a result of asymmetric segregation of genetic material during meiosis in a gamete of a parent carrying a balanced aberration, usually a reciprocal translocation or inversion. In most cases it is impossible to precisely define them because the final clinical presentation is the result of an overlap, usually due to different sizes of deletions and/or duplications of genetic material [3, 4]. The 3q duplication syndrome is a result of duplication of a large fragment of the long arm of chromosome 3, especially 3q21-qter, and in most cases it is diagnosed only after birth In patients with this syndrome, the observed defects include abnormalities of the central nervous system, facial dysmorphia, congenital heart
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