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Hydatidiform MoleAka: Hydatid Mole, Molar Pregnancy
- See Also
- Epidemiology: Incidence
- North America and Europe: 1:1000 to 1:1500 pregnancies
- Asia and Latin America: 1:400 to 1:200 pregnancies
- Philippines: 1:250
- Risk Factors
- Prior molar pregnancy
- Extremes of reproductive age
- Age under 20 years
- Age over 45 years
- Twin Gestation
- High parity
- Malnutrition
- Pathophysiology
- Form of Trophoblastic Neoplasia
- Benign proliferation of chorionic villi
- Fetus absent
- Choriocarcinoma (risk: 10-20%) predisposing factors
- Complete hydatiform mole
- Abnormally proliferative trophoblast
- Pitocin or Hysterectomy for mole evacuation
- Oral Contraceptive use after mole evacuation
- Form of Trophoblastic Neoplasia
- Types
- Complete Mole
- Total hydatidiform change
- Marked proliferation of trophoblastic cells
- No evidence of fetal vessels
- Karyotype: 46XX (all paternally derived)
- Derived from haploid 23X sperm
- Sperm duplicates chromosomes without cell division
- Higher risk for malignant change
- Partial Mole
- Associated with non-viable fetus or vessels only
- Moderate trophoblastic proliferation
- Karyotype: Triploid (69XXX or 69XXY)
- Fertilization by more than one sperm
- Malignant change less likely than in complete mole
- Complete Mole
- Symptoms
- Vaginal Bleeding during pregnancy in 3rd-4th month
- Hyperemesis Gravidarum
- Passage of grapelike villi from the uterus
- Abdominal Pain early in pregnancy
- Pallor or Dyspnea
- Associated with Anemia
- Anxiety and Tremor
- Due to weak Thyroid stimulation by HCG
- Signs
- Excessive Uterine enlargement
- Larger than expected for gestational age
- Fetus absent
- Fetal Heart Tones absent
- Absent fetal parts
- Ovarian enlargement (10%)
- Related to theca-lutein cysts
- Onset Hypertension early in pregnancy
- Occurs before Pregnancy Induced Hypertension
- Occurs in first or second trimester
- Excessive Uterine enlargement
- Histology
- Gross Examination
- Whitish grape-like cluster
- Interspersed blood clots
- Microscopic changes of villi
- Trophoblastic proliferation
- Cytotrophoblast (Langerhans Cell) proliferation
- Cuboid cells
- Prominent nuclei
- Syncytiotrophoblast proliferation
- Sheets of cytoplasm proliferate
- Dark oval nuclei
- Cytotrophoblast (Langerhans Cell) proliferation
- Hydropic changes to central stroma
- Cystic spaces form (cisterns)
- Avascular edematous spaces form
- Fetal Vessels absent
- Trophoblastic proliferation
- Gross Examination
- Labs
- Quantitative bhCG
- Excessively elevated above expected levels
- Level may exceed 1 Million IU
- Directly reflects tumor volume
- Complete Blood Count
- Anemia
- Platelets decreased
- Liver Function Testing
- Thyroid Function Testing
- Quantitative bhCG
- Radiology
- Molar pregnancy screening: Pelvic Ultrasound
- Mass of Vesicles appears like snowstorm
- Differential diagnosis
- Septic Abortion
- Fibroma
- Molar Pregnancy confirmed
- Chest XRay
- Consider CT Head and Abdomen
- Molar pregnancy screening: Pelvic Ultrasound
- Complications
- Malignant transformation to Choriocarcinoma in 10-20%
- Locally Invasive Mole: Chorioadenoma destruens (66%)
- Gestational Choriocarcinoma (33%)
- Hyperthyroidism
- Pregnancy Induced Hypertension
- Malignant transformation to Choriocarcinoma in 10-20%
- Management
- Evacuation of uterus
- Dilatation and Evacuation
- Dilatation and Curettage
- Avoid Hysterectomy, Hysterotomy, or Pitocin
- Increased risk of metastasis (relative risk: 3.0)
- Clamp uterine vessels early if Hysterectomy needed
- Chemotherapy Indications after D&C
- Quantitative bhCG persistently elevated
- Persistent uterine bleeding
- Evidence of trophoblastic metastasis
- Brain
- Lungs
- Evacuation of uterus
- Monitoring
- Follow Quantitative bhCG levels until 0
- Serial bHCG for 6 months to 1 year
- Use Contraception during this time
- Chemotherapy if bHCG rises or does not fall to 0
- Methotrexate usually used
- Prognosis
- Recurrence rate of complete mole: 20%
- May recur as locally invasive or metastatic
- Recurrence rate in future pregnancies: 1-2%
- Recurrence rate of complete mole: 20%
- References
- Stenchever (2001) Comprehensive Gynecology, p. 1047-62
- Shapter (2001) Obstet Gynecol Clin North Am 28(4):805
Hydatidiform Mole (C0020217) | |
|---|---|
| Definition (MSH) | Trophoblastic hyperplasia associated with normal gestation, or molar pregnancy. It is characterized by the swelling of the CHORIONIC VILLI and elevated human CHORIONIC GONADOTROPIN. Hydatidiform moles or molar pregnancy may be categorized as complete or partial based on their gross morphology, histopathology, and karyotype. |
| Definition (CSP) | trophoblastic hyperplasia associated with normal gestation, or molar pregnancy; characterized by the swelling of the chorionic villi and elevated human chorionic gonadotropin; hydatidiform moles or molar pregnancy may be categorized as complete or partial based on their gross morphology, histopathology, and karyotype. |
| Definition (NCI) | A rare cancer in women of childbearing age in which cancer cells grow in the tissues that are formed in the uterus after conception. Also called gestational trophoblastic disease, gestational trophoblastic neoplasia, gestational trophoblastic tumor, or choriocarcinoma. |
| Definition (NCI) | A gestational disorder characterized by an abnormal placenta with marked enlargement of the chorionic villi and hyperplasia of the villous trophoblastic cells. According to the amount of villous involvement, a hydatidiform mole is defined as complete or partial. Most molar pregnancies are complete and are characterized by generalized hydropic villous changes. Partial moles are characterized by a mixture of large hydropic villi and normal placenta tissue. Complete moles are usually diploid and typically present between the eleventh and twenty-fifth week of pregnancy, whereas partial moles are usually triploid and usually present around the nineteenth week of pregnancy. The incidence of choriocarcinoma is higher in patients with complete hydatidiform mole. When a hydatidiform mole invades the myometrium and broad ligament, or it is found in distant sites as vagina, vulva, and lung, it is referred as invasive mole. |
| Concepts | Neoplastic Process (T191) |
| ICD9 | 630 |
| MSH | D006828 |
| English | chorionic tumor, Classical hydatidiform mole, hydatid mole, Hydatid Moles, HYDATIDIFORM MOLE, hydatidiform mole GTT, Hydatidiform Moles, HYDM, MOLAR PREGN, Molar Pregnancies, Molar Pregnancy, Molar pregnancy with hydatid mole, Molar pregnancy with hydatidiform mole, Molar pregnancy with vesicular mole, Mole -RETIRED-, Mole of pregnancy, PREGN MOLAR |
| Spanish | embarazo molar, mola del embarazo, mola hidatiforme |
| Parent Concepts | Genital Neoplasms, Female (C0017416), Disorder of pregnancy (C0151864), ECTOPIC AND MOLAR PREGNANCY (C0178293), Gestational trophoblastic neoplasms (C1135868), Common Germ Cell Tumor (C1333130), Trophoblastic Neoplasms (C0041182), cellular diagnosis, gestational trophoblastic tumor (C0279906), stage, gestational trophoblastic tumor (C0280477), Hydatidiform Mole (C0020217), Abnormal products of conception (C0269274), Hydatidiform mole, benign (C0549315), Ambiguous concept (C1274012), Reason not stated concept (C1276325) |
| Sources | COSTAR, CSP, CST, DXP, ICD9CM, LCH, MSH, MTH, NCI, NDFRT, OMIM, PDQ, SCTSPA, SNOMEDCT Derived from the NIH UMLS (Unified Medical Language System) |