Testing is a normal part of care during pregnancy to see how the baby is growing and to monitor its health. Some tests are routine, while other tests are only done when there is a special need or concern.
Your physician will consider many factors – including health history and the suspected diagnosis – when they decide which tests to order for you and your baby.
Talk with your physician to be sure that you understand what you will learn from a test and whether or not there are any risks to consider.
Ultrasound Tests
The most direct way a physician can monitor your baby’s condition during fetal life is to image the baby with ultrasound. An ultrasound test is painless and safe. The same equipment is used to see many different things in the developing fetus. Your physician may order several types of ultrasound tests during your pregnancy.
Non-Stress Test
A non-stress test monitors the baby’s heart rate. It is commonly done in the third trimester to check on the fetal health. During this test, the fetal heart rate is monitored to see how it responds both to periods of activity and periods of rest. The physician also watches for uterine contractions. It is called “non-stress” because nothing is done to place stress on the fetus during the test. An obstetrician or MFM reviews the test results.
Genetic Testing and CHD
It’s natural to worry about what caused your child to have CHD. In many cases, there is no clear cause. In some children the heart is the only part of their body that didn’t form normally – this is called an “isolated” abnormality. In other children, CHD occurs with other anatomic differences – this is called “syndromic” abnormality.
There is frequently a genetic component to a cardiac malformation. Genes are often referred to as the “blueprints” for the body and they come packaged in structures called chromosomes. Humans usually have 23 pairs of chromosomes. The genes in our chromosomes are responsible for telling our early embryonic cells how to grow, divide, and eventually form a human body.
Sometimes the fetal genetic information has errors that can result in a problem with the baby’s development. For example:
- There can be an entire extra chromosome = a trisomy
- A piece of a chromosome may be missing = a deletion
- A section of a chromosome can have an extra copy = a duplication
- An error within a single gene that impairs how the protein will function = a pathogenic variant
Chromosomal and genetic testing looks for these mistakes in the genes. A common cause for isolated CHD is a combination of many factors – such as small errors in multiple genes in conjunction with unknown environmental factors (known as multifactorial inheritance).
There are two basic types of genetic tests available in pregnancy: screening tests and diagnostic tests.
Even the most thorough genetic testing may not answer what caused the heart to form abnormally. That’s because scientists don’t know what all the possible mistakes are that can cause cardiac malformations.
Screening Tests
These tests provide more specific information about the chance of a problem but carry no risk to the pregnancy.
Sequential Combined Screening
Using a sample of your blood from the first and second trimesters, a nuchal translucency measurement from the back of the fetal neck, and your age, you receive a calculated risk of Down syndrome/trisomy 21, trisomy 18, and neural tube defects.
Noninvasive Prenatal Testing
Takes a sample of your blood to look for fragments of fetal chromosomes that slip into your bloodstream from the placenta. Not all NIPT tests are the same, but it generally looks for Down syndrome, trisomy 18, trisomy 13, sex chromosome abnormalities, and triploidy (an entire third set of chromosomes).
Diagnostic Tests
Chorionic Villus Sampling or amniocentesis can diagnose a chromosomal or genetic condition in the fetus prior to birth, but both carry a slight chance of miscarriage. Your physician can tell you more about these basic types of diagnostic genetic tests if they recommend that you consider them.
Karyotype
Looks for trisomies and large rearrangements in the chromosomes.
Chromosomal Microarray (CMA)
Checks for smaller missing or extra pieces of genetic material.
Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization (FISH)
Checks to see if a specific piece of the genetic material is missing.
Congenital Heart Disease Genetic Panel
Sequences multiple different genes to look for pathogenic variants.
Whole Exome Sequencing (WES)
Sequences all coding areas of the chromosomes to look for pathogenic variants in many genes associated with CHD.
What Are the Benefits of Genetic Testing?
Understanding the Results of Genetic Testing
Positive Results
This finding identifies the cause of your child’s congenital heart disease and informs you of the chance for it to happen again. Other family members can be tested to see if they carry the same genetic change.
Negative Results
This means that a genetic cause of your child’s congenital heart disease was not identified. A negative result does not rule out an underlying genetic cause of your child’s CHD. As our understanding of the genetics of CHD and our genetic testing technology improves, it is possible we will be able to identify a cause in the future.
Uncertain Results
Sometimes called a “variant of unknown significance (VUS),” uncertain results indicate that a change in the genetic code was found, but there is not enough proof to know if it is a harmless change or one that caused your child’s heart disease. This inconclusive result cannot be used to determine decisions about care or identify other at-risk family members. Over time, a VUS may be reclassified as pathogenic or benign.
Meg Homeyer, Genetic Counselor
Hannah Ison, Genetic Counselor
Sharon Paige, Physician
Sameer Pangrekar, Parent
See the full list of contributors to the CHD Care Compass
Last Update: September 11, 2021