Pregnant women with hyperphenylalaninemia are at high risk of spontaneous abortion and of giving birth to infants with congenital malformations, microcephaly and mental defect. Among mothers whose phenylalaninemia is greater than 1200 mumol/L (20 mg/100 mL), 95% have at least one child with mental retardation. A low phenylalanine diet with a good control of phenylalaninemia, started before conception, reduces this risk, better results being obtained when plasma phenylalanine levels are maintained below 360 mumol/L (6 mg/100 mL) as compared with levels maintained between 360 to 600 mumol/L (6-10 mg/100 mL). Thus, systematic contraception and planned pregnancies must be recommended in all hyperphenylalanemic young women. This implies early information of phenylketonuric teenage girls and their parents. In addition, efforts must be made to join and inform all women having had hyperphenylalaninemia at birth, whether they received a dietary treatment or not. It is also important that general practitioners, pediatricians and obstetricians be aware of the high recurrence risk in hyperphenylalanemic women who gave birth to a microcephalic or malformed infant.