Department of Fetal Medicine, Copenhagen University Hospital Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark. caroline_winther@hotmail.com
This study investigated the gender distribution in karyotype results from chorionic villus samples and amniocenteses performed due to an increased risk for Down syndrome based on first-trimester combined risk assessment.
All prenatal karyotypes performed from 2006-2008 due to a risk assessment above 1:300 were retrieved from the Danish Central Cytogenetic Register. The distribution of gender for all newborns was obtained from Statistics Denmark. The ?(2) test and odds ratios were used for intergroup comparison.
We retrieved 5 157 karyotype results (54.9% male and 45.1% female karyotypes), of which 4 662 were normal. During the same period, 100 112 boys and 94 732 girls were born. Women carrying male fetuses were significantly more often referred for invasive testing than women carrying female fetuses (2.8 vs. 2.5%, p