Open Access
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 · Journal of Fetal Medicine 2019; 06(04): 159-164
DOI: 10.1007/s40556-019-00213-x
Original Article

Antenatal Diagnosis of Bilateral Proximal Femoral Focal Deficiency (PFFD)

1   Fetal Medicine and Clinical Geneticist, Max Super Speciality Hospital, West Block, 1 Press Enclave Road, Saket, 110017, New Delhi, India
,
Renu Raina Sehgal
2   Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Artemis Health Institute, Sector 51, 122001, Gurgaon, India
,
Tauqeer Syed Fazal
3   Department of Radiology, Artemis Health Institute, Sector 51, 122001, Gurgaon, India
,
Nitin Jagtiani
3   Department of Radiology, Artemis Health Institute, Sector 51, 122001, Gurgaon, India
,
Pankaj Saini
4   Department of Radiology, Manipal Hospitals Dwarka, Sector 6, Dwarka, 110075, New Delhi, India
› Author Affiliations
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Abstract

Proximal femoral focal deficiency (PFFD) is a rare skeletal dysplasia, characterized by hypoplasia of the subtrochanteric femur with variable degrees of shortening of the femoral shaft. There are numerous gene e.g. TBX4, FGF, FGFR, TP63 and HOX responsible for limb formation, type and its shape. Normal limb development is three dimensional; proximodistal axis regulated by AER; anteroposterior axis (preaxial/postaxial) governed by SHH with ZPA and dorsoventral axis controlled by LMX1B. Primigravida with diamniotic dichorionic twins in first trimester was found to have absent right femur, fibula and left femural bone with hypoplastic right foot in one foetus. Right tibia, both left tibia and fibula and left foot were visualized normally. Bilateral humerus, radius and ulna along with digits were visualized with no evidence of oligodactyly. Twin II had no major limb reduction defect. Both nasal bones, hard palate were visualized; nuchal translucency was within normal range for the foetus of 13 weeks 3 days of duration; suggestive of bilateral PFFD; Aitken type 4 in Twin I. We are the first to describe bilateral PFFD in the first trimester of pregnancy. Nuchal scan provides a window of opportunity to the foetal medicine specialists to screen the foetus for major congenital anomalies and to proceed with further investigation or with selective reduction as in this case so as to optimize the pregnancy outcome. Identification of PFFD at 13 weeks with foetal reduction helped in minimizing the risk to the surviving foetus.



Publication History

Received: 14 May 2019

Accepted: 27 August 2019

Article published online:
08 May 2023

© 2019. Society of Fetal Medicine. This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonDerivative-NonCommercial-License, permitting copying and reproduction so long as the original work is given appropriate credit. Contents may not be used for commercial purposes, or adapted, remixed, transformed or built upon. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)

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