Fetal choroid plexus cysts: beware the smaller cyst.

Current literature suggests that amniocentesis be performed on fetuses with simple choroid plexus cysts only when such cysts are 1.0 cm or greater in diameter and bilateral. At retrospective analysis of 3,769 patients, choroid plexus cysts were noted in 87 (2.3%), representing a rate three times greater than that of previous reports. Eight-three patients underwent amniocentesis. Six (7.2%) had abnormal karyotypes. Four patients had the commonly associated chromosomal abnormality trisomy 18. Two had karyotypes not usually associated with this problem: mosaic Turner syndrome and trisomy 21. Of the six patients with abnormal karyotypes, one had a 4-mm-diameter unilateral choroid plexus cyst and three had bilateral cysts of 3-5 mm. Only one patient with a 16-mm cyst had any associated structural abnormality discovered at rigorous ultrasound examination. Karyotyping may be necessary in fetuses with small choroid plexus cysts. Deciding which patients should be encouraged to undergo amniocentesis is made more complex by these data.

[1]  L. Platt,et al.  Fetal choroid plexus cysts in the second trimester of pregnancy: a cause for concern. , 1991, American journal of obstetrics and gynecology.

[2]  E. Miller,et al.  Sonographically detected fetal choroid plexus cysts. Frequency and association with aneuploidy. , 1991, Journal of ultrasound in medicine : official journal of the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine.

[3]  R. Lilford,et al.  Fetal choroid plexus cysts: a report of 100 cases. , 1990, Radiology.

[4]  B. Harlow,et al.  Are choroid plexus cysts an indication for second-trimester amniocentesis? , 1990, American journal of obstetrics and gynecology.

[5]  E. Reece,et al.  The clinical significance of prenatally diagnosed choroid plexus cysts. , 1989, American journal of obstetrics and gynecology.

[6]  H. Irving,et al.  A prospective study of the incidence and significance of fetal choroid plexus cysts , 1989, Prenatal diagnosis.

[7]  J. Hooker,et al.  The significance of prenatal diagnosis of choroid plexus cysts , 1989, Prenatal diagnosis.

[8]  Hershey Dw Fetal choroid plexus cysts [letter] , 1989 .

[9]  J. Bowie,et al.  Fetal choroid plexus lesions. Relationship of antenatal sonographic appearance to clinical outcome. , 1989, Journal of ultrasound in medicine : official journal of the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine.

[10]  D. Wilson,et al.  Choroid Plexus Cysts in Fetuses with Trisomy 18 , 1989, Obstetrics and gynecology.

[11]  R. Berkowitz,et al.  Choroid Plexus Cysts in the Fetus: A Benign Anatomic Variant or Pathologic Entity? Report of 41 Cases and Review of the Literature , 1988, Obstetrics and gynecology.

[12]  M. Furness CHOROID PLEXUS CYSTS AND TRISOMY 18 , 1987, The Lancet.

[13]  F. Bieber,et al.  Transient cysts of the fetal choroid plexus: Morphology and histogenesis , 1987, American journal of medical genetics.

[14]  N. Patel,et al.  PRENATAL DIAGNOSIS OF CHOROID PLEXUS CYSTS , 1987, The Lancet.

[15]  P. Doubilet,et al.  Antenatal sonographic findings in trisomy 18. , 1986, Journal of ultrasound in medicine : official journal of the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine.

[16]  S. Samuels,et al.  Analysis of 2136 genetic amniocenteses: experience of a single physician. , 1985, American journal of obstetrics and gynecology.

[17]  D. Sarti,et al.  Follow-up of 2000 Second-Trimester Amniocenteses , 1980, Obstetrics and gynecology.

[18]  A. Cameron,et al.  A new trisomic syndrome. , 1960, Lancet.