Prenatal Diagnosis of Immune Diseases

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Prenatal diagnosis (PND) of Primary Immunodeficiency Diseases (PIDs) is indicated in families with a previously affected child where the specific molecular or biochemical defect has been identified. With the shift toward molecular genetics, functional assays are now reserved for cases where the genotype is unknown.

Indications

Modalities of Prenatal Diagnosis

PND can be categorized into Molecular, Biochemical, and Functional/Phenotypic methods.

1. Molecular Diagnosis (Gold Standard)

2. Biochemical Assays

Used for metabolic PIDs where the enzyme deficiency is expressed in fetal tissues.

3. Fetal Blood Sampling (Cordocentesis)

Specific PID Considerations

Disease Diagnostic Method Key Marker/Defect
SCID CVS/Amniocentesis Mutation in IL2RG, RAG1/2, JAK3
XLA CVS/Fetal Blood BTK mutation / Absence of B-cells (CD19+)
CGD Fetal Blood (DHR) Impaired oxidative burst
Wiskott-Aldrich CVS/Fetal Blood WAS mutation / Small, low platelets
LAD-1 Fetal Blood Absence of CD18/CD11
Bare Lymphocyte CVS/Fetal Blood Absence of HLA Class I/II

Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis (PGD)

Non-Invasive Prenatal Testing (NIPT)

Management Post-Diagnosis

  1. If Affected: Counseling regarding prognosis, option of termination, or preparation for in-utero therapy/early postnatal HSCT.
  2. If Unaffected: Routine obstetric care; confirmation of status via cord blood at birth.