# Transcervical, Transabdominal and Transvaginal Chorionic Villus Sampling for Prenatal Diagnosis in Zagreb, Croatia: A Prospective Single-Operator Study on 5500 Cases

**Authors:** Petra Podobnik, Tomislav Meštrović, Mario Podobnik, Ivan Bertović-Žunec, Igor Lončar, Kristian Kurdija, Dženis Jelčić, Zlata Srebreniković, Slava Podobnik-Šarkanji

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics15212750 · 2025-10-30

## TL;DR

This study compares three methods of chorionic villus sampling for prenatal diagnosis, finding that the transabdominal method has the lowest fetal loss and best tissue quality.

## Contribution

The study provides a large-scale, single-operator comparison of three CVS techniques, highlighting TA-CVS as the safest and most effective for prenatal diagnosis.

## Key findings

- TA-CVS had significantly lower spontaneous abortion rates (0.18%) compared to TC-CVS (0.6%) and TV-CVS (1.3%).
- TA-CVS provided optimal tissue weight (10–20 mg) more frequently (66.7%) than TC-CVS (35.3%) or TV-CVS (36.7%).
- No diagnosed intellectual disability was observed in children after five years of follow-up.

## Abstract

Background/Objectives: Chorionic villus sampling (CVS) is a pivotal diagnostic tool for early prenatal detection of chromosomal and genetic abnormalities; however, the safety and diagnostic efficacy of different CVS approaches remain a subject of clinical interest. This monocentric study compares transcervical (TC-CVS), transabdominal (TA-CVS) and transvaginal (TV-CVS) techniques, focusing on procedure-related fetal loss and diagnostic yield. Methods: In this 15-year, single-operator prospective study, a total of 5500 women underwent CVS between 10 and 14 weeks of gestation at a single center. Sampling was performed via TA-CVS (n = 4500), TC-CVS (n = 850), or TV-CVS (n = 150). Outcomes assessed included fetal loss rates, sample adequacy, early complications and hemodynamic changes measured by Doppler ultrasound. A p-value < 0.05 (two-tailed) was considered statistically significant. Results: Spontaneous abortion rates were significantly lower following TA-CVS (0.18%; 8/4500) compared to TC-CVS (0.6%; 5/850) and TV-CVS (1.3%; 2/150) (χ2 = 24.56, p < 0.001). Post hoc pairwise analysis showed significantly lower fetal loss in TA-CVS compared to TC-CVS, but not between TA-CVS and TV-CVS. Cytogenetic abnormalities were detected in 220 cases (4.0%), and clinically significant copy number variants (CNVs) were confirmed in fetuses with major structural malformations. Five-year follow-up showed no diagnosed intellectual disability among assessed children. Optimal tissue weight (10–20 mg) was more frequent with TA-CVS (66.7%) than TC-CVS (35.3%) or TV-CVS (36.7%) (χ2 = 350.92, p < 0.001). In a Doppler subset (n = 400), uterine, spiral, and interplacental artery PI changes were non-significant; the umbilical (p = 0.032) and middle cerebral arteries (p < 0.001) showed transient PI reductions after sampling. Conclusions: Transabdominal CVS demonstrated the most favorable balance of safety and diagnostic quality, suggesting it should be the preferred first-line technique in early prenatal diagnosis. Standardized technique and operator training remain critical to optimize outcomes.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Cytogenetic abnormalities (MESH:D002869), abortion (MESH:D000026), fetal loss (MESH:D005315), chromosomal and genetic abnormalities (MESH:D025063), intellectual disability (MESH:D008607), structural malformations (MESH:D020914)
- **Chemicals:** TC (MESH:D013667), TA (MESH:D013635)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12610224/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12610224