
The presence of a twin inside the body of the other twin may go undetected for years.
Rare foetus in foetus
In January 2025, doctors at the Buldhana District Women’s Hospital in Maharashtra detected a rare case of “fetus in fetu” in a pregnant woman. This condition occurs when a malformed foetus develops inside another foetus. The rare congenital anomaly was detected during a regular sonographic assessment of a 32-year-old pregnant woman.
‘Foetus in fetu’ is a foetus-like mass developed within the body of the other foetus in a monozygotic twin pregnancy. Basically, one twin is very underdeveloped and enwrapped inside the body of the other twin, so much so that the pregnancy is considered a singleton pregnancy. The presence of a twin inside the body of the other twin may go undetected for years. In this case, the condition was discovered during a routine pregnancy scan itself. The woman delivered the baby by a C-section delivery. Doctors performed a surgery on the newborn to remove the undeveloped foetus wrapped in the infant’s body. Both the mother and baby recovered well.
Also known as cryptodidymus, this is a rare congenital disorder that affects about one in 500,000 births. Less than 200 cases have been reported worldwide, with about 10 to 15 cases in India.
The exact cause of this condition is not fully understood, but it’s believed to result from an anomaly during the development of monozygotic or identical twins. About 10 to 15 days after conception of monozygotic twins, the cell mass of the embryo may be split unevenly, due to which one twin is smaller and incompletely formed with the other twin fully developed. The smaller twin gets trapped within the larger twin. The trapped twin is considered “parasitic,” it draws its blood supply and nutrients from the other “host” twin. The trapped or “parasitic twin” has some morphologic features of a normal foetus such as an umbilical cord-like structure, a bag of membranes surrounding it, and blood vessel connections to the host twin. It may have a vertebral column, limbs, and a few organs but lacks vital organs like the brain, heart. or gut. Despite having “living tissue,” the parasitic twin has no prospects of independent existence outside the host twin.
The presence of the parasitic twin affects the health of the host twin, who had to “feed” the former from the nutrients received over a single umbilical cord. In addition, enlargement of the trapped parasitic twin may compress vital organs in the host and cause discomfort or life-threatening complications.
Generally, the parasitic twin is found in the abdomen of the host twin. Rarely, it may be found in other organs like the brain or chest. Most of the cases reported have presented in childhood as abdominal mass causing gut obstruction and swelling. X-rays and CT scans have confirmed the presence of fetal structures like digits, limbs, spine, etc., in the mass. Treatment is surgical excision of the mass — parasitic twin — with special attention being given to the foetus’ blood supply.
A continuing mystery
Fetus in fetu is considered a mystery of twinning for a number of reasons: the exact mechanism of how one twin becomes enclosed within the other during early embryonic development is not fully understood. This needs greater insight into early embryologic processes. While some cases show well-defined body structures, others may only present as a mass with poorly developed organs, making diagnosis challenging. The age of presentation is variable, with some cases diagnosed only when the host twin is 40. The presentation may vary from seizures, tumour-like mass, or gut, or kidney obstruction depending on where the trapped twin lies.
There is also the knowledge that ‘Foetus in fetu’ maybe a developmental anomaly rather than a true twin pregnancy, and what is considered a parasitic twin may actually be a teratoma, a tumour with many components including bones, skin, hair, etc. In this regard, monitoring for malignant potential is recommended.
Published – February 14, 2025 12:01 am IST