From a spina bifida clinic we have identified two patients with a syndrome of myelomeningocele and Waardenburg syndrome type 3 (WS3). The patients each possess a single, de novo, interstitial deletion of chromosome 2 (2q35-36.2), including the PAX3 gene. Deletion of PAX3 was confirmed by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Analysis with PAX3 and flanking microsatellites shows that the deleted interval of chromosome 2 is of paternal origin and is at least 2 and 6 cM in the two patients. Interstitial deletions in this region result in the Waardenburg syndrome (WS1), but have not been associated with neural tube defects (NTDs). Although other etiologies have not been formally excluded, these patients raise the possibility of a digenic etiology of their NTDs via a genetic interaction of the deleted PAX3 gene with a second unidentified locus.