The incident involved a 34-year-old man from Washington State. He and his partner welcomed a son in 2014 via a fertility clinic. After realizing the baby’s blood type did not match either parent, the father took a standard paternity test. The results claimed he shared only 10% of his DNA with the child, declaring he was not the biological father.

Fearing a catastrophic error or mix-up at the fertility clinic, the couple hired a lawyer and consulted geneticist Barry Starr at Stanford University.

How It Happened: Human Chimerism
Starr recommended a deeper ancestry DNA test through 23andMe. The data shockingly showed that the man was genetically the uncle of his own son.
Further medical testing by researchers published in the Journal of Assisted Reproduction and Genetics solved the puzzle:
  • Vanishing Twin Syndrome: Early in his mother’s pregnancy, the father was a fraternal twin. The other twin died early in the womb and was reabsorbed by the surviving embryo.
  • Two Sets of DNA: Instead of disappearing completely, the cells of the deceased twin fused with the father. He became a human chimera—a person possessing two entirely distinct sets of DNA.
  • The Ghost Genome: The father’s saliva and cheek cells carried his own DNA, but his reproductive organs carried his unborn brother’s DNA. The sperm cell that fertilized the mother’s egg belonged genetically to the twin who was never born.

This was the first documented case in medical history where a paternity test was fooled by human chimerism. (A similar maternal case occurred in 2002 to a Washington woman named Lydia Fairchild, whose children initially showed no genetic match to her).

Here is a breakdown of how this rare condition happens and another famous case that shocked the medical world.
How Tetragametic Chimerism Occurs
The specific condition in this story is called tetragametic chimerism. It happens during a very specific window in early pregnancy:
  • Two separate eggs are fertilized by two separate sperm cells at the same time.
  • This process normally creates fraternal twins.
  • In a chimera case, the two separate fertilized eggs fuse together very early in development.
  • The resulting single embryo grows normally but contains two completely different sets of DNA.
  • Some organs in the body develop from the first set of DNA, while other organs develop from the second set.
Other Famous Cases
The Case of Lydia Fairchild (2002)
Lydia Fairchild was a mother from Washington State who applied for government assistance while pregnant with her third child. Routine DNA tests showed that her two existing children were not genetically hers, and the state accused her of fraud and welfare scamming.
When she gave birth to her third child, court-ordered witnesses recorded the birth and immediately tested the newborn’s DNA. The test still showed she was not the biological mother. Further testing revealed Lydia was a chimera. The DNA in her skin and hair did not match her children, but the DNA in her cervical tissue did.
The Case of Karen Keegan (1998)
Karen Keegan was a teacher from Boston who needed a kidney transplant. When her adult sons were tested to see if they could donate a kidney, the results showed they were not her biological children.
Doctors eventually solved the mystery by testing tissue samples taken from different parts of Karen’s body. They discovered that her blood cells carried one set of DNA, but her ovaries carried a completely different set, which she had passed on to her sons.

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