Invasive and metastatic hydatidiform moles in Slovakia in 1993‒2022

Bratisl Lek Listy. 2024;125(7):423-428. doi: 10.4149/BLL_2024_65.

Abstract

Objective: A retrospective analysis of invasive and metastatic hydatidiform moles (HM) in the Slovak Republic (SR)‒epidemiology, patient characteristics and treatment outcomes.

Backround: Invasive and metastatic mole is a highly curable type of gestational trophoblastic neoplasia. Both invasive and metastatic HM may be cured by hysterectomy without adjuvant chemotherapy.

Methods: Nineteen cases of histopathologically confirmed HM (10 invasive and 9 metastatic) were treated in SR from 1993 to 2022. Patients were divided into two groups according to treatment modality (hysterectomy only ‒ 8; hysterectomy and chemotherapy ‒ 11). The parameters included in the analysis were patient age, antecedent pregnancy, human chorionic gonadotropin level, tumor size and time to remission.

Results: The incidence of invasive and metastatic HM in the SR was 1:121,253 pregnancies, or 1:86,589 live births. The overall cure rate was 100%, without recurrence. Hysterectomy was performed as first-line therapy in 14 patients, with a cure rate of 57.1%. 4 out of 8 patients (50%) with metastatic moles, who underwent first-line hysterectomy, were cured without chemotherapy. There was no statistically significant difference between the two groups in all selected parameters.

Conclusion: First-line hysterectomy may lead to remission without adjuvant chemotherapy or reduce the number of chemotherapies in invasive and metastatic HM (Tab. 4, Fig. 2, Ref. 21).

Keywords: gestational trophoblastic disease; hysterectomy chemotherapy.; invasive and metastatic mole.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Hydatidiform Mole / epidemiology
  • Hydatidiform Mole / pathology
  • Hydatidiform Mole / therapy
  • Hydatidiform Mole, Invasive / pathology
  • Hydatidiform Mole, Invasive / therapy
  • Hysterectomy*
  • Incidence
  • Middle Aged
  • Pregnancy
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Slovakia / epidemiology
  • Treatment Outcome
  • Uterine Neoplasms* / pathology
  • Uterine Neoplasms* / therapy
  • Young Adult