The causes of misdiagnosis and adverse outcomes in PGD.

TitleThe causes of misdiagnosis and adverse outcomes in PGD.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2009
AuthorsWilton L, Thornhill A, Traeger-Synodinos J, Sermon KD, Harper JC
JournalHum Reprod
Volume24
Issue5
Pagination1221 - 8
Date PublishedMay
ISSN1460-2350
Accession Number19155287
KeywordsDiagnostic Errors, Female, Humans, In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence, Mosaicism, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Pregnancy, Preimplantation Diagnosis, Quality Control, Societies, Medical
Abstract

The European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology PGD Consortium has collected data on PGD cycles and deliveries since 1997. From 15,158 cycles, 24 misdiagnoses and adverse outcomes have been reported; 12/2538 cycles after polymerase chain reaction and 12/12,620 cycles after fluorescence in situ hybridization. The causes of misdiagnosis include confusion of embryo and cell number, transfer of the wrong embryo, maternal or paternal contamination, allele dropout, use of incorrect and inappropriate probes or primers, probe or primer failure and chromosomal mosaicism. Unprotected sex has been mentioned as a cause of adverse outcome not related to technical and human errors. The majority of these causes can be prevented by using robust diagnostic methods within laboratories working to appropriate quality standards. However, diagnosis from a single cell remains a technically challenging procedure, and the risk of misdiagnosis cannot be eliminated.

DOI10.1093/humrep/den488
Notify Library Reference ID1635

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