UFA-Referat II GTN
UFA-Referat II GTN
UFA-Referat II GTN
MANAGEMENT OF RECURRENT
GESTATIONAL TROPHOBLAST TUMORS
By:
Dr Nahrisyah Ulfa Safna
Supervisor:
Dr H Patiyus Agustiansyah, SpOG(K)-
Onk, MARS
Moderator:
Dr Hj Hartati, SpOG(K)-Obginsos, Mkes
Assesor: Opponent:
Dr H Azhari, SpOG(K)-Obginsos Dr Terry Mutia
Dr H Amir Fauzi, SpOG(K)-Urogin, PhD Dr R Ismail Hadyathma
Dr A Abadi, SpOG(K)-FER Dr Radinal YS Prayitno
Dr H Irawan Sastradinata, SH, SpOG(K)-
Onk, MARS
DR Dr Peby Maulina Lestari, SpOG(K)-KFM
Outline
Introduction
Literature Review
Conclusion
Reference
INTRODUCTION
Introduction
Gestational Trophoblastic Disease/ GTD
A group of rare diseases in which abnormal trophoblast cells grow in the uterus
after conception
Hippocrates 400 BC
Correct diagnosis and proper follow-up are important to maximize outcomes in patients with
this disease
Epidemiology
Includes invasive mole, choriocarcinoma, placental site trophoblastic tumor (PSTT) and
trophoblastic epitheloid tumor.
About 25% of GTN tumors will be resistant or will recur after initial chemotherapy
called recurrent GTN or chemoresistence GTN.
Age
The risk of GTD increases threefold in women over 50 ages who have a
pregnancy
Ethnic Assians
Asian ethnic women are almost twice as likely to develop GTD
Diet Factor
Low carotene intake and animal fats
Patophysiology
Deviated villi structures with trophoblast hyperplasia, tangled villi vessels, and
stromal cariorectic debris
Pathology
Mola Hidatidosa
Trophoblast cells are essentially rapidly dividing and invasive, with direct invasion of the
myometrium and vascular invasion
Pathology
Placental site trophoblast tumor (PSTT)
It consists of sheets of intermediate trophoblast cells, with lesions of low or high grade malignancy
PSTT is characterized by low beta-hCG levels due to neoplastic intermediate trophoblast cell
proliferation.
Diagnose
Mtx Regimen
1. Mtx: 0.4-0.5 mg / kg IV or IM daily for 5 days
2. Mtx: 30-50 mg / m2 IM every week
3. Mtx / FA
• Mtx 1 mg / kg IM or IV on days 1, 3, 5, 7
• FA 10 mg PO days 2, 4, 6, 8
6. High doses of Mtx / FA
• Mtx 100 mg / m2 IV bolus
• Mtx 200 mg / m2 12 hours infusion
• FA 15 mg setiap 12 hours infusion
• FA 15 mg every 12 hours in 4 doses IM or PO started 24 hours after starting Mtx
A study from Charing Cross hospital (London, UK) found that single-agent
chemotherapy (methotrexate) only cured 30% of low-risk women with hCG levels
greater than 100,000 mIU/mL and was futile in low-risk lesions where hCG levels
were greater than 400,000 mIU/mL
TREATMENT
• single-agent pulsed dactinomycin (Covens
Low-Risk GTN 2006) (where first line therapy has been
methotrexate);
• five-day dactinomycin (McNeish 2002);
• Etoposide and dactinomycin (EA) (Dobson
When first-line 2000);
chemotherapy fails, • Methotrexate, dactinomycin,
secondary cyclophosphamide (MAC) (Goldstein
chemotherapy, with or 2012);
without surgery, is • Etoposide, methotrexate,
used to achieve dactinomycin/cyclophosphamide,
remission. vincristine (EMA/CO) (McNeish 2002).
Treatment
High risk management of GTN
Women with high-risk GTN (FIGO Stage IV and Stage II-III, score> 6) are at a higher risk of
first-line treatment failure and therefore require multi-agent combination chemotherapy (with
or without adjuvant radiation therapy and or surgery) to achieve a cure
Vincristine 1 mg / m2 IVP
EMA / EP pad protocol
1 Etopside 100 mg / m 2 by infusion in 200 mL of saline for 30 minutes
The cure rate for non-metastatic and low-risk metastatic GTN is close to
100% with use of the single agent Mtx and actD administered sequentially
and use of a multi-agent protocol when single agent resistance develops
Kang et al
EMA / EP is an effective salvage regimen for EMA / CO resistant patients, resulting in
cure rates ranging from 66.6% to 84.9%.
Wang et al
TP / TE produces a cure rate comparable to EMA / EP, but with lower toxicity
Osborne et al
a new 3-drug doublet regimen consisting of paclitaxel, etoposide, and cisplatin (TP / TE)
leading to complete remission
Treatment
Recurrence GTN Management
Cure rates for high-risk GTN from 80% to 90% can now be achieved with
intensive multimodal therapy, with EMA / CO with adjuvant radiotherapy and /
or surgery if indicated.
This regimen is very successful because of its relatively low toxicity allowing
adherence to treatment schedules, and a high complete response rate,
Treatment
Follow up
Follow-up in patients with stage I to stage III GTN should receive follow-up with:
1. Measurement of weekly to normal serum hCG levels for 3 consecutive
weeks
2. Measurement of monthly serum hCG values to normal levels for 12
consecutive months
3. Contraception that is effective during the entire hormonal follow-up interval
Treatment
Follow up
CAUSED BY:
1.measurement of pituitary hCG-like substance;
2.production of free hCG a-subunit;
3.interference by nonhCG substances, including hLH or hLH a-
Misleading results are
subunit, both species-specific and heterophilic anti-animal
usually seen with values
immunoglobulin antibodies, rheumatoid factor, anti-hCG
below 1,000 mIU/mL
antibodies, and nonspecific serum factors; and
4.assay issues such as carryover by positive displacement
pipettes and contaminants that affect label detection (radioactive
iodine or fluorophores).
False-postivie serum hCG (con't)
1. low-level positive result (generally < 1,000 mIU/mL and usually < 150
mIU/mL);
2. positive serum but negative urine;
3. serial dilutions of serum that are not parallel to the hCG standard and
yield higher or lower levels of hCG when multiplied by dilution factor;
4. positive hCG results that are not consistent with clinical or surgical
findings;
5. no substantial changes in levels that were measured in serial blood
samples, even after therapeutic procedures; and
6. negative results in a different type of quantitative hCG assay
Persistent low hCG value (quiescent GTN)