Abstract

To determine the temporal persistence of the residual cell-free DNA (cfDNA) of the deceased cotwin in maternal circulation after selective fetal reduction and evaluate its long persistence in noninvasive prenatal testing (NIPT). Dichorionic diamniotic twins (N=5) undergoing selective fetal reduction because of a trisomy were recruited. After informed consent, maternal blood was collected immediately before reduction and periodically after reduction until birth. The plasma cfDNA of each sample was sequenced and analyzed for fetal aneuploidy and fetal fractions. In all pregnancies, the fetal fraction of the cfDNA of the deceased fetus increased to peak at 7-9weeks after fetal reduction, and subsequently decreased gradually to almost undetectable during the late third trimester. The NIPT T-scores persistently reflected the detection of fetal trisomy up to 16 (median 9.5) weeks after fetal reduction. Residual cfDNA from the deceased cotwin after selective reduction at 14-17 gestational weeks led to the persistent generation of false-positive NIPT results for up to 16weeks postdemise. Thus, providing NIPT for pregnancies with a cotwin demise in early second trimester is prone to misleading results and not recommended.

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