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Dive into the research topics where Miriam S. DiMaio is active.

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Featured researches published by Miriam S. DiMaio.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1987

Screening for Fetal Down's Syndrome in Pregnancy by Measuring Maternal Serum Alpha-Fetoprotein Levels

Miriam S. DiMaio; Alexander Baumgarten; Robert M. Greenstein; Howard M. Saal; Maurice J. Mahoney

Although the risk of Downs syndrome increases with maternal age, women under 35 bear about 80 percent of the infants born with this condition. We prospectively investigated the utility of measuring maternal serum alpha-fetoprotein during the second trimester in women under 35 in order to identify pregnancies in which the fetus was affected with Downs syndrome. Over a two-year period, 34,354 women in this age group were screened. Amniocentesis was offered when the risk of Downs syndrome, calculated as a function of maternal age and maternal serum alpha-fetoprotein concentration adjusted for maternal weight and race, was 1:270 or higher, the risk for a 35-year-old woman. This threshold was exceeded in 1451 women in whom gestational age was confirmed by ultrasound; 9 women in this group had a fetus with the syndrome. In three women whose fetuses had trisomy 18 and one whose fetus had trisomy 13, the calculated risk of Downs syndrome was 1:270 or higher. Thus, among women in whom the risk exceeded our cutoff point, 1 in 161 were found to have a pregnancy in which the fetus was affected with Downs syndrome; the figure was 1 in 112 for all autosomal trisomies. Eighteen pregnancies involving Downs syndrome, three involving trisomy 18, and two involving trisomy 13 were not associated with a calculated risk above the cutoff point. The available data indicate that in our population, using a cutoff for risk at which 5 percent of women under 35 are offered amniocentesis, we will detect one quarter to one third of pregnancies in which the fetus has Downs syndrome.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1990

Cytogenetic results of chorionic villus sampling: high success rate and diagnostic accuracy in the United States collaborative study.

David H. Ledbetter; Alice O. Martin; Yury Verlinsky; Eugene Pergament; Laird G. Jackson; Teresa L. Yang-Feng; Steven A. Schonberg; Fred Gilbert; Julia Zachary; Marie Barr; Karen L. Copeland; Miriam S. DiMaio; Beth A. Fine; Barbara J. Rosinsky; Jane Schuette; Felix de la Cruz; Robert J. Desnick; Sherman Elias; Mitchell S. Golbus; James D. Goldberg; Herbert A. Lubs; Maurice J. Mahoney; George G. Rhoads; Joe Leigh Simpson; Sarah E. Schlesselman

Cytogenetic results of first-trimester chorionic villus sampling are reported from seven U.S. medical centers. For 6033 patients who had a successful chorionic villus sampling procedure, the rate for obtaining a cytogenetic diagnosis was 99.6% with the direct method, long-term culture, or both. There were no incorrect sex predictions and no diagnostic errors involving trisomies 21, 18, or 13, sex chromosome aneuploidies, or structural abnormalities. There were no cases of normal cytogenetic diagnosis followed by birth of a cytogenetically abnormal infant. Three cases of unusual aneuploidies (tetraploidy, trisomy 16, and trisomy 22) detected by the direct method only were not confirmed by cytogenetic follow-up. Mosaic cytogenetic abnormalities were observed in 0.83% of all cases in which chorionic villus sampling was done but were confirmed by amniocentesis or in fetal tissues in only 7 of 30 cases (23.3%). Maternal cell contamination occurred in 1.9% of long-term cultures, although this did not present any cytogenetic diagnostic difficulties. Overall, a very high degree of laboratory success and diagnostic accuracy was observed with either cytogenetic method, although fewer predictive errors were observed with the long-term culture method and none were observed when both methods were used.


Genetics in Medicine | 2005

Fragile X syndrome carrier screening in the prenatal genetic counseling setting.

Amy Cronister; Miriam S. DiMaio; Maurice J. Mahoney; Alan E. Donnenfeld; Stephanie Hallam

Purpose: To document our experience with fragile X carrier screening.Methods: In this study, 29,103 women with no known or suspected family history of fragile X syndrome were offered fragile X carrier screening during their prenatal genetic counseling visit. Screening acceptance was analyzed by referral indication, carrier frequencies documented, and prenatal outcome data presented.Results: Overall, 7.9% accepted carrier screening. The premutation frequency was 1 in 382, and the intermediate allele frequency was 1 in 143.Conclusions: Fragile X screening is a desirable option for some women seeking prenatal genetic counseling and should be made available to this population.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2009

Clinical and Genomic Characterization of Distal Duplications and Deletions of Chromosome 4q: Study of Two Cases and Review of the Literature

Michael R. Rossi; Miriam S. DiMaio; Bixia Xiang; Kangmo Lu; Hande Kaymakcalan; Margretta R. Seashore; Maurice J. Mahoney; Peining Li

Variable clinical presentations of patients with chromosomally detected deletions in the distal long arm (q) of chromosome 4 have been reported. The lack of molecular characterization of the deletion sizes and deleted genes hinders further genotype–phenotype correlation. Using a validated oligonucleotide array comparative genomic hybridization (oaCGH) analysis, we examined two patients with apparent chromosomal deletions in the distal 4q region. In the first, oaCGH identified a 2.441 megabase (Mb) duplication and a 12.651 Mb deletion at 4q34.1 in a pregnant female who transmitted this aberration to her son. This mother has only learning disabilities while her son had both renal and cardiac anomalies in the newborn period. Unrecognized paternal genetic factors may contribute to the variable expression. The second patient is a 17‐year‐old female with a history of Pierre Robin sequence, cardiac abnormalities and learning disabilities. She was diagnosed prenatally with a de novo 4q deletion, and oaCGH defined a 16.435 Mb deletion of 4q34.1–4q35.2. Phenotypic comparison and subtractive genomic mapping between these two cases suggested a 4 Mb region possibly harboring a candidate gene for Pierre Robin sequence. Our cases and review of reported cases with genomic findings indicated the presence of familial variants with variable expressivity as well as de novo or inherited pathogenic simple deletion, duplication and complex deletion and duplication in the distal 4q region.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2011

Genomic Characterization of Prenatally Detected Chromosomal Structural Abnormalities Using Oligonucleotide Array Comparative Genomic Hybridization

Peining Li; Pawel Pomianowski; Miriam S. DiMaio; Joanne R. Florio; Michael R. Rossi; Bixia Xiang; Fang Xu; Hui Yang; Qian Geng; Jiansheng Xie; Maurice J. Mahoney

Detection of chromosomal structural abnormalities using conventional cytogenetic methods poses a challenge for prenatal genetic counseling due to unpredictable clinical outcomes and risk of recurrence. Of the 1,726 prenatal cases in a 3‐year period, we performed oligonucleotide array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) analysis on 11 cases detected with various structural chromosomal abnormalities. In nine cases, genomic aberrations and gene contents involving a 3p distal deletion, a marker chromosome from chromosome 4, a derivative chromosome 5 from a 5p/7q translocation, a de novo distal 6q deletion, a recombinant chromosome 8 comprised of an 8p duplication and an 8q deletion, an extra derivative chromosome 9 from an 8p/9q translocation, mosaicism for chromosome 12q with added material of initially unknown origin, an unbalanced 13q/15q rearrangement, and a distal 18q duplication and deletion were delineated. An absence of pathogenic copy number changes was noted in one case with a de novo 11q/14q translocation and in another with a familial insertion of 21q into a 19q. Genomic characterization of the structural abnormalities aided in the prediction of clinical outcomes. These results demonstrated the value of aCGH analysis in prenatal cases with subtle or complex chromosomal rearrangements. Furthermore, a retrospective analysis of clinical indications of our prenatal cases showed that approximately 20% of them had abnormal ultrasound findings and should be considered as high risk pregnancies for a combined chromosome and aCGH analysis.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1992

Bilateral choroid plexus cysts in trisomy 21

Siegfried Rotmensch; Jia-Sen Luo; Jose Nores; Miriam S. DiMaio; John C. Hobbins

Whether karyotyping is indicated in a fetus with choroid plexus cysts who is otherwise structurally normal is still controversial. Many authors have suggested basing the decision on cyst size, bilaterality, persistence with advancing gestational age, and association with other anomalies. We report a case of large bilateral choroid plexus cysts in a fetus with trisomy 21 who had no evidence of congenital anomalies or ultrasonographic signs of Down syndrome. Cyst sizes diminished by half over a 3-week period of follow-up. It appears that diminishing size alone should not be considered sufficient reassurance about the normality of the fetal karyotype. A similar case has been previously reported, and it is conceivable that choroid plexus cysts are associated not only with trisomy 18 but also with trisomy 21.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2009

Variable Expression of a Novel PLP1 Mutation in Members of a Family With Pelizaeus-Merzbacher Disease

Aviva Fattal-Valevski; Miriam S. DiMaio; Fuki M. Hisama; Grace M. Hobson; Angelique Davis-Williams; James Garbern; Maurice J. Mahoney; Edwin H. Kolodny; Gregory M. Pastores

Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease is a rare X-linked disorder caused by mutations of the proteolipid protein 1 gene that encodes a structural component of myelin. It is characterized by progressive psychomotor delay, nystagmus, spastic quadriplegia, and cerebellar ataxia. Variable clinical expression was seen in 5 members of a family bearing a novel missense mutation in proteolipid protein 1, c.619T>C. Symptomatic patients included a 6-year-old girl, her younger brother, and their maternal uncle, a 29-year-old college graduate initially diagnosed with cerebral palsy; their brain magnetic resonance imaging studies showed diffuse dysmyelination. The mother had a history of delayed walking, achieved independently by age 3; she and the maternal grandmother were asymptomatic on presentation. Review of clinical information and family history led to consideration of Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease. Subsequent identification of the causal mutation enabled preimplantation genetic diagnosis and the birth of an unaffected child.


Prenatal Diagnosis | 1993

Follow-up of pregnancies complicated by placental mosaicism diagnosed by chorionic villus sampling

Julie S. Fryburg; Miriam S. DiMaio; Teresa L. Yang-Feng; Maurice J. Mahoney


Prenatal Diagnosis | 1993

First‐trimester prenatal diagnosis of osteogenesis imperfecta type II by DNA analysis and sonography

Miriam S. DiMaio; Richard A. Barth; Kathryn E. Koprivnikar; Betsy L. Sussman; Joshua A. Copel; Maurice J. Mahoney; Peter H. Byers; Daniel H. Cohn


Prenatal Diagnosis | 1992

Postnatal placental confirmation of trisomy 2 and trisomy 16 detected at chorionic villus sampling: A possible association with intrauterine growth retardation and elevated maternal serum alpha‐fetoprotein

Julie S. Fryburg; Miriam S. DiMaio; M.J. Mahoney

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Joyce E. Fox

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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