Gestational Trophoblastic Disease: (Hydatidiform Mole)
Gestational Trophoblastic Disease: (Hydatidiform Mole)
Gestational Trophoblastic Disease: (Hydatidiform Mole)
TROPHOBLASTIC
DISEASE
(Hydatidiform Mole)
Gestational trophoblastic disease (GTD) is a general term that includes different types of disease:
• Hydatidiform Moles(HM)
Complete HM.
Partial HM.
• Gestational Trophoblastic Neoplasia (GTN)
Invasive moles
Choriocarcinomas
Placental-site trophoblastic tumors (PSTT; very rare).
Epithelioid trophoblastic tumors (ETT; even more rare).
Two Types of Molar Growth
Complete Mole Partial Mole
• All trophoblastic villi swell and become • some of the villi form normally, however, is
cystic. swollen and misshapen.
• Karyotype: 46 chromosomes, 46XX or • Karyotype: 69 chromosomes
46XY • one set supplied by an ovum that apparently
• Contributed only by the father or an was fertilized by two sperm or an ovum
“empty ovum” was fertilized and the fertilized by one sperm in which meiosis or
chromosome material was duplicated. reduction division did not occur.
DIAGNOSI
S
Physical examination and History: General signs of health, including checking for signs of disease. History of the
patient’s health habits and past illnesses and treatments.
Bimanual examination: Assess uterine size. GTD causes the uterus to reach its landmarks (just over the symphysis brim at 12
weeks, at the umbilicus at 20 to 24 weeks) before the usual time.
Serum or urine test of hCG: -1 to 2 million IU compared with a normal pregnancy level of 400,000 IU.
Transvaginal Ultrasound (Ultrasonography)
:With complete moles theca lutein cysts may be found on one or both ovaries.
:With incomplete moles, fetal parts may be visible.
Vaginal Bleeding: Presence of clear fluid-filled cysts.
Blood Tests: use blood samples to check the levels of certain hormones and
other substances that may be impacted by the presence of GTD.
Other scans: including x-rays, computed tomography (CT) or magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI).
RISK
FACTORS
Dietary deficiencies: including lack of folate, beta-carotene or low protein
intake.
Maternal Age Extremes
Hysterectomy: Surgical removal of the uterus. In a
total hysterectomy, the uterus and cervix are
removed. In a total hysterectomy with salpingo-
oophorectomy, the uterus plus one ovary and
fallopian tube are removed; or the uterus plus both
ovaries and fallopian tubes are removed. In a radical
hysterectomy, the uterus, cervix, both ovaries, both
fallopian tubes, and nearby tissue are removed.
These procedures are done using a low transverse
incision or a vertical incision.
EFFECTS ON PREGNANCY
Feeling of loss after its evacuation that the woman would have experienced after the
loss of a true pregnancy.
possibility that a malignancy may develop.
Delay childbearing plans for a year.
One incidence of gestational trophoblastic disease have an increased risk of a second
molar pregnancy.
She experiences the symptoms of pregnancy because the placenta continues to make the
pregnancy hormone human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG).
PROGNOSIS
Almost all females with this condition achieve a complete cure and have an excellent
survival rate.
Hydatidiform moles are curable in 100 percent of cases. Further treatment is required
in 10 percent of all cases. There is a 15 to 25 percent of a complete mole persisting and a 0.5
to 4 percent chance of a partial mole
If the level of HCG does not return to normal or increases, it may mean the
hydatidiform mole was not completely removed and it has become cancer. For disease that
remains after surgery, treatment is usually chemotherapy.