Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis:
Breaking the “Family Curse” of Genetic Disease
Patients that carry genetic disease now have the opportunity to break the “family curse” by selecting healthy, disease-free
embryos through the Fertility Treatment Center’s preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) program. Through genetic analysis, FTC can detect
certain inherited or chromosomal diseases prior to implantation by analyzing a single cell of an early embryo. Data gathered from PGD analysis
is then used to select embryos considered unlikely to be affected for transfer, ensuring that babies born after the procedure will not carry
the genetic disease.
Fertility Treatment Center was the first center in the southwestern United States to report a successful pregnancy following
in-vitro fertilization (IVF) with embryo biopsy and PGD screening for genetic disease, and is the only REI center in Arizona performing PGD-FISH
(fluorescent in-situ hybridization) on-site.
When is PGD used?
PGD is generally used with couples who have lost pregnancies due to genetic disorders, who already have one child with a genetic
problem, or who are carriers of a genetic disease. The procedure may detect Down syndrome, cystic fibrosis, hemophilia A, Tay-Sachs disease, and
Turner syndrome, along with other disorders.
PGD is performed in the laboratory by removing a single cell from each embryo. This cell is then analyzed for the presence of genetic disorders.
Once a diagnosis is made, which usually takes about a day, only unaffected embryos are transferred back into a woman's uterus.
PGD Detected Diseases
For couples aware of genetic disorders through family history or based on carrier testing, PGD testing can be performed to help avoid a pregnancy
or child born with the specified genetic condition. In genetic disorders where the gene structure is known, such as Cystic Fibrosis or Tay-Sachs,
the actual genes of the embryo are examined for presence of the condition. Other genetic disorders, such as Duchenne muscular dystrophy or hemophilia,
only affect males and, therefore, the DNA of the embryo is examined to determine the sex and only the female embryos are transferred.
PGD can currently be used to detect the following single gene disorders:
- Cystic Fibrosis is an inherited disease that affects the respiratory and digestive system. Caused by a defective gene,
cystic fibrosis affects the body's mucus and sweat glands, often causing chronic lung infections. It affects about one in 2500 Caucasians and
one in 25 is a carrier of the defective gene. It is the most common fatal hereditary disorder affecting Caucasians in the U.S. and requires both
male and female carriers to pass it on to children.
- Sickle Cell Anemia is an inherited disease of the red blood cells which can cause attacks of pain and damage to vital organs
and can lead to early death. The disease occurs when a person inherits two sickle cell genes or a combination of one sickle cell gene and any
one of several other abnormal hemoglobin genes. In the U.S., most cases of sickle cell disease occur among African-Americans, and Hispanics of
Caribbean ancestry. About one in every 400 African-Americans has sickle cell disease. It also affects people of Arabian, Greek, Maltese, Italian,
Sardinian, Turkish and Indian ancestry.
- Thalassemia is a group of inherited diseases of the blood, causing red blood cell deficiencies. The most severe form, alpha
thalassemia, results in fetal or newborn death and affects mainly individuals of Southeast Asia, Chinese and Filipino ancestry. Others with milder
forms and varying degrees of anemia appear healthy at birth and then slowly show symptoms of the disease. About 100,000 babies worldwide are
born with severe forms of the disease each year, most frequently occurring in people of Italian, Greek, Middle Eastern, Southern Asian and African
ancestry.
- Tay Sachs Disease is a fatal inherited disease of the central nervous system where affected babies lack the necessary protein
for breaking down certain fatty substances in brain and nerve cells. These substances build up and gradually destroy brain and nerve cells, until
the entire central nervous systems shuts down, causing the child to go blind, become paralyzed and die by age 5. Tay Sachs occurs most frequently
in descendants of Central and Eastern European Jews. About one out of every 30 American Jews carries the gene. Non-Jewish individuals of French-Canadian
ancestry and member of the Cajun population in Louisiana are similarly at risk - about 100 times the rate of occurrence of other ethnic groups.
- Myotonic Dystrophy shows up in people at various stages of life and can cause mild or severe symptoms affecting various
types of tissues and organs. It affects about one in 8000 people and includes 4 different types: congenital (appearing at birth and is most severe);
juvenile (appearing after birth and in teen years); adult (appears in late 20's to early 40's); and late onset (appears later after 40's and
is generally mild).
- Fragile X Syndrome is a hereditary condition which can cause learning problems in both males and females.
- Phenylketonuria (PKU) is a rare, inherited metabolic disease that results in mental retardation and other neurological
problems when treatment is not started within the first few weeks of life.
- Gaucher's Disease is a lipid-storage disorder commonly affecting Jewish people of Eastern European ancestry that causes
symptoms ranging from none to severe disability and death.
- Retinoblastoma is an intraocular (eye) cancer of childhood that affects approximately 300 children in the U.S. each year,
causing many to lose their affected eye(s).
- Hemophilia A & B are genetic disorders of the blood leading to improper clotting, causing patients to suffer from frequent
spontaneous bleeding episodes.
- Fanconi Anemia is an inherited anemia that leads to bone marrow failure and affects males and females of all ethnic groups.
- Alzheimer’s (APP gene) is an incurable neurological disease in which changes of the nerve cells of the brain result
in the death of large numbers of cells, causing serious mental deterioration, dementia and death.
- Retinitis Pigmentosa is a progressive degeneration of the retina that affects night vision and peripheral vision and may
lead to blindness.
- Epidermolysis Bullosa, a group of inherited disorders in which massive blistering of the skin develops in response to minor
trauma, varies in severity from minor blistering to a lethal form in which the constant massive blistering and scarring ultimately lead to death.
- Duchenne's muscular dystrophy, characterized by rapidly progressive muscle weakness of the legs and pelvis and later affecting
the whole body, usually appears in males 1 to 6 years old.
- P53 Oncogene Mutation occurs with unusually high frequency in tumor tissue. The gene, called P53, mutates in nearly half
of all cancers.
- HLA Genotyping involves the exploration of generic information encoded on white blood cells, searching for potentially
fatal blood diseases.
- OTC Deficiency, in its most common form, causes death in affected newborn males because of their inability to properly
process nitrogen in food proteins due to a genetic defect of the liver.
- Neurofibromatosis (NF1 & NF2) is a genetic disorder of the nervous system that causes tumors to form on the nerves
anywhere in the body at any time.
- Multiple Epiphyseal Dysplasia, also called Fairbank's Disease, is an inherited condition resulting in the formation of
abnormal epiphyses or bone ends.
- Achondroplasis, or dwarfism, is an inherited condition that is caused by a lack of growth spurt, particularly in the arms
and legs at the time of puberty.
- LCHAD is caused by an enzyme defect in the beta-oxidation cycle, resulting in an inability to break down fatty acids into
a useable energy source, ultimately causing low blood sugar levels, poor muscle tone, and problems with the functioning of the heart.
- X-Linked Hydrocephalus, transmitted by females and manifested in males, is a disturbance of formation, flow or absorption
of cerebrospinal fluid that leads to an increase in volume occupied by this fluid in the central nervous system.
- ADA Deficiency, while very rare and often lethal, results in improper functioning of the body's immune system and often
causes those afflicted to live in sheltered or enclosed environments.
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