Vesicular Mole Flashcards
What is the clinical classification of gestational trophoblastic diseases (GTD)?
Benign
- vesicular mole: Hydatidiform mole (partial or complete)
Malignant
- invasive mole
- choriocarcinoma
What is the difference between the karyotype of a complete & partial mole?
COMPLETE
- 46-XX: entirely paternal in origin due to haploid sperm fertilizing anucleated or inactivated ovum
- 46-XY: paternal in origin with dispermatic fertilization
- no fetal tissue or blood vessels
- bilateral theca-lutein cysts
PARTIAL
one maternal & 2 paternal haploid complements
- 69-XXX
- 69-XXY
- 69-XYY
- some fetal tissue or amniotic sac
- only part of the placenta is affected
Which type of vesicular mole has a risk of malignancy?
Complete hydatidiform mole has a 20% risk
- 15% locally invasive
- 5% metastatic choriocarcinoma
What are theca-lutein cysts & what is their cause?
25-60% of complete mole -> bilateral theca lutein cysts in ovaries
- smooth yellowish, lined with lutein cells
- caused by large amounts of B-hCG secreted by the proliferating trophoblasts -> ovarian hyperstimulation
What are the complications of theca-lutein cysts?
very large cysts undergo
- infarction
- torsion
- hemorrhage
OR regress spontaneously within 2-4 months after molar evacuation
What is the prognosis of partial vesicular mole?
4 - 8 % progress to locally invasive non metastatic trophoblastic tumors
What are the risk factors for vesicular moles?
1- women in east asia
2- low dietary intake of carotene (Vitamin A deficiency)
3- maternal age <20 & >40
4- previous mole: recurrence 1-2%
What is the pathogenesis of moles?
1- excess trophoblastic proliferation
2- excess hCG, chorionic thyrotropin, & progesterone
3- avascularity of villi
5- hydropic degeneration
6- formation of grape like vesicles
7- early death & absorption of the embryo
What is the clinical picture of a complete hydatidiform mole?
- amenorrhea (8-12 weeks)
- vaginal bleeding (PAINLESS) -> anemia
- prune juice discharge
- spontaneous expulsion of hydatid vesicles resembling grapes
- hyperemesis gravidarum
- trophoblastic embolization -> dyspnea, chest pain, tachypnea, severe respiratory distress
What is found in general examination of patient with suspected complete mole?
- signs of pregnancy
- signs of anemia
- signs of pre-eclampsia: hypertension & edema
- hyperthyroidism: tachycardia, warm skin, tremors
What is found in abdominal examination of patient with suspected complete mole?
- large to date uterus in 50%
- uterus is doughy (due to absent amniotic fluid)
- absence of fetal parts & fetal heart sounds
- no external ballotement
What is found in pelvic examination of patient with suspected complete mole?
- cystic ovaries in 25-600% of cases due to theca-lutein cysts
- discharge of vesicles
- no internal ballotement
What is found in general examination of patient with suspected partial mole?
like incomplete or missed abortion
diagnosis only made after histopathological review of curettage biopsy
What are the complications of vesicular moles?
- bleeding
- perforation of uterus: in invasive
- infection (absent membranes)
- invasive mole or choriocarcinoma
- pre-eclampsia & eclampsia (high hCG)
- hyperthyroidism: excess TSH -> heart failure
- recurrence
What investigations should be preformed to diagnose vesicular moles?
1- urine pregnancy test: 1/500 diagnostic
2- serum B-hCG: higher than expected (>100 000 in complete)
3- Ultrasound: snow-storm appearance, honey-comb appearance, theca-lutein, anechoic cystic spaces
- multiple cystic spaces in placenta + fetus -> partial mole
4- x-ray abdomen: no fetal skeleton
5- x-ray chest: to exclude canon-ball metastasis