NIPT utilizing cffDNA provides high sensitivity and specificity for advanced screening.
Postnatal Diagnosis
Standard G-banded karyotyping of peripheral blood lymphocytes remains the gold standard for definitive diagnosis.
FISH on uncultured blood allows for rapid preliminary detection within 24 to 48 hours.
CMA is useful for clarifying complex chromosomal rearrangements or partial trisomies.
Baseline evaluation requires urgent echocardiography, cranial imaging, and renal ultrasonography to delineate internal malformations.
Management and Prognosis
Care paradigms emphasize a patient-centered approach involving shared decision-making regarding palliative care versus intensive neonatal interventions.
System-specific management includes airway support, medical management of heart failure, and pharmacological control of clinical seizures.
Prognosis remains exceptionally poor with a median survival of 7 to 10 days.
Approximately 50% of infants succumb within the first week, and 90% mortality is observed within the first year.
Long-term survivors experience severe intractable seizures, sensory impairments, and require total assistance for daily living.
Recurrence risk for full nondisjunction trisomy 13 is approximately 1%.
Parental karyotyping is mandatory for translocation cases; parental balanced translocation carriers face significantly elevated recurrence risks and require options like PGT or invasive prenatal diagnosis for future pregnancies.