Prevalence of chromosomal alterations in first-trimester spontaneous pregnancy loss

Author:

Essers Rick,Lebedev Igor N.ORCID,Kurg AntsORCID,Fonova Elizaveta A.ORCID,Stevens Servi J. C.,Koeck Rebekka M.ORCID,von Rango Ulrike,Brandts Lloyd,Deligiannis Spyridon PanagiotisORCID,Nikitina Tatyana V.ORCID,Sazhenova Elena A.ORCID,Tolmacheva Ekaterina N.ORCID,Kashevarova Anna A.ORCID,Fedotov Dmitry A.ORCID,Demeneva Viktoria V.,Zhigalina Daria I.ORCID,Drozdov Gleb V.ORCID,Al-Nasiry Salwan,Macville Merryn V. E.ORCID,van den Wijngaard Arthur,Dreesen Jos,Paulussen Aimee,Hoischen AlexanderORCID,Brunner Han G.,Salumets AndresORCID,Zamani Esteki MasoudORCID

Abstract

AbstractPregnancy loss is often caused by chromosomal abnormalities of the conceptus. The prevalence of these abnormalities and the allocation of (ab)normal cells in embryonic and placental lineages during intrauterine development remain elusive. In this study, we analyzed 1,745 spontaneous pregnancy losses and found that roughly half (50.4%) of the products of conception (POCs) were karyotypically abnormal, with maternal and paternal age independently contributing to the increased genomic aberration rate. We applied genome haplarithmisis to a subset of 94 pregnancy losses with normal parental and POC karyotypes. Genotyping of parental DNA as well as POC extra-embryonic mesoderm and chorionic villi DNA, representing embryonic and trophoblastic tissues, enabled characterization of the genomic landscape of both lineages. Of these pregnancy losses, 35.1% had chromosomal aberrations not previously detected by karyotyping, increasing the rate of aberrations of pregnancy losses to 67.8% by extrapolation. In contrast to viable pregnancies where mosaic chromosomal abnormalities are often restricted to chorionic villi, such as confined placental mosaicism, we found a higher degree of mosaic chromosomal imbalances in extra-embryonic mesoderm rather than chorionic villi. Our results stress the importance of scrutinizing the full allelic architecture of genomic abnormalities in pregnancy loss to improve clinical management and basic research of this devastating condition.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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