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Gestational trophoblastic disease (GTD) is most often found
either as a result of abnormal signs or symptoms during pregnancy or
from the results of certain tests during routine prenatal care.
Signs and symptoms
It's important to let your doctor know about any abnormal
symptoms you are having during pregnancy. Your doctor may suspect that
gestational trophoblastic disease (GTD) is present based on a typical
pattern of signs and symptoms. Many of these may also be caused by
conditions other than GTD. Still, if you have any of these, it's
important to see your doctor right away so the cause can be found and
treated, if needed.
Complete hydatidiform moles (molar
pregnancies)
Most of these signs and symptoms (except for bleeding), are
seen less commonly now than in the past because they tend to occur late
in the course of the disease. Most women with GTD are now diagnosed
early because of the use of blood tests and ultrasound early in
pregnancy.
Vaginal bleeding:
Almost all women with complete hydatidiform moles have irregular
vaginal bleeding during pregnancy. It occurs a little less often with
partial moles. Bleeding typically starts during the first trimester (13
weeks) of pregnancy. Women with GTD often pass blood clots or watery
brown discharge from the vagina. Sometimes, pieces of the mole
resembling a cluster of grapes become dislodged from the uterus and are
discharged through the vagina.
Anemia:
In cases of serious or prolonged bleeding, a woman's body is not able
to replace red blood cells as fast as they are lost. This can lead to
anemia (low red blood cell counts). Symptoms can include fatigue and
shortness of breath, especially with physical activity.
Abdominal
swelling: The uterus and abdomen tend to get bigger faster
in a complete molar pregnancy than they do in a normal pregnancy.
Abnormal uterine enlargement occurs in about 1 out 4 women with
complete moles but rarely in women with partial moles.
Vomiting:
Many women have nausea and vomiting during the course of a typical
pregnancy. With GTD, however, the vomiting may be more frequent and
severe than normal.
Pre-eclampsia: Pre-eclampsia
(toxemia of pregnancy) can occur as a complication of a normal
pregnancy (usually in the third trimester). When it occurs earlier in
pregnancy (like during the first or early second trimester), it can be
a sign of a complete molar pregnancy. Pre-eclampsia may cause problems
such as high blood pressure, headache, exaggerated reflexes, swelling
in the hands or feet, and too much protein leaking into the urine. It
affects a small number of women with complete moles but is rare in
women with partial moles.
Hyperthyroidism:
Hyperthyroidism (having an overactive thyroid gland) occurs in some
women with complete hydatidiform moles. Symptoms of hyperthyroidism can
include rapid heartbeat, warm skin, sweating, problems tolerating heat,
and mild tremors (shaking). This occurs in less than 10% of women with
complete molar pregnancy.
Partial hydatiform moles
The signs and symptoms of partial hydatidiform moles are
similar to those of complete moles, but often are less severe. Some
symptoms, such as frequent vomiting or an overactive thyroid gland,
rarely, if ever, occur with partial moles.
Partial moles are often diagnosed after what is thought to be
a miscarriage. The molar pregnancy is found when the uterus is scraped
during a dilation and curettage (D & C) and the products of
conception are looked at under a microscope.
Invasive moles and choriocarcinoma
These more invasive forms of GTD sometimes develop after a
complete mole has been removed. They occur less commonly after a
partial mole. Choriocarcinoma can also develop after a normal
pregnancy, ectopic pregnancy (where the fetus grows outside of the
uterus, such as inside a fallopian tube), or miscarriage. Symptoms can
include:
Bleeding:
The most common symptom is vaginal bleeding. Rarely, the tumor grows
through the uterine wall, which can cause bleeding into the abdominal
cavity along with severe abdominal pain.
Infection:
In larger tumors, some of the tumor cells may die, creating an area
where bacteria can grow. Infection may develop, which can cause vaginal
discharge, crampy pelvic pain, and fever.
Abdominal
swelling: Like hydatidiform moles, more invasive forms of
GTD can expand the uterus, causing abdominal swelling. Human chorionic
gonadotropin (HCG), a hormone made by the tumor (see below), may cause
fluid-filled cysts (called theca lutein cysts) to form in the ovaries,
which can be large and may also contribute to abdominal swelling.
Lung symptoms:
The lung is a common site for distant spread of GTD. Spread to the
lungs may cause coughing up of blood, a dry cough, chest pain, or
trouble breathing.
Vaginal mass:
These tumors can sometimes spread to the vagina, which can cause
vaginal bleeding or a pus-like discharge. The doctor may also notice a
cancerous growth on the vagina during a pelvic exam.
Other symptoms of distant spread: Symptoms depend on where the
spread occurs. If GTD has spread to the brain, symptoms can include
headache, vomiting, dizziness, seizures, or paralysis on one side of
the body. Spread to the liver can cause abdominal pain and a yellowing
of the skin or eyes (jaundice).
Placental site trophoblastic tumors
Placental site trophoblastic tumors rarely spread to distant
sites. More often, they grow into the wall of the uterus
Bleeding: As
with other forms of GTD, the most common symptom is vaginal bleeding.
If the tumor grows all the way through the wall of the uterus, it can
cause bleeding into the abdominal cavity with severe abdominal pain.
Abdominal
swelling: As they grow within the wall of the uterus, they
may cause the uterus to enlarge.
Blood and urine tests
Blood and urine tests can be used to help diagnose GTD.
Human chorionic
gonadotropin (HCG): Trophoblastic cells of both normal
placentas and GTD make a hormone called human chorionic gonadotropin
(HCG), which is vital in supporting a pregnancy. HCG is released into
the blood, and some of it is excreted in the urine. This hormone
consists of 2 chemical components, and the commonly-used blood and
urine tests measure one of these, called beta-HCG (βHCG).
HCG is normally found only in the blood or urine of pregnant
women. In fact, finding HCG in urine is the basis of most pregnancy
tests.
A complete mole usually releases more HCG than a normal
placenta, so finding higher than expected HCG levels in the blood can
be a sign that a complete mole is present.
However, not all women with GTD have HCG levels that are
higher than those seen in a normal pregnancy. For example, most women
with partial moles or placental site trophoblastic tumors have normal
or only slightly increased HCG levels.
HCG tests can also help tell if GTD may be present after a
pregnancy or miscarriage, as the level of HCG should normally fall to
an undetectable level soon afterward.
Along with helping to diagnose GTD, blood HCG levels are also
very useful in women already known to have GTD. They can be used to:
- help estimate the amount of GTD present in a patient's
body. Higher levels of HCG may mean that more tumor cells are present
in the body.
- determine if treatment is working. HCG levels should drop
to normal levels after treatment.
- detect GTD that has come back after treatment
It's especially important to monitor HCG levels during
treatment and follow-up to make sure the disease has gone away or has
not returned. The HCG test is generally very accurate. In rare cases,
patients may have abnormal substances (antibodies) in their blood that
interfere with the HCG test. When these patients' blood samples are
tested, the HCG levels appear higher than they really are, a situation
known as phantom HCG.
In some cases, women have been diagnosed with GTD when it is not
actually present. A sign of phantom HCG is having high blood levels of
HCG, but normal urine levels (because the abnormal antibodies are not
present in urine). If doctors notice that the blood (or serum) levels
of HCG are high but the urine levels are not, they can order special
tests to distinguish between truly elevated HCG levels and phantom HCG.
Other blood
tests: Other tests may provide indirect evidence of GTD.
For example, red blood cell counts can detect anemia (having too few
red blood cells), which can be caused by uterine bleeding. Human
placental lactogen (hPL) is a marker that may be used to follow
patients with PSTT.
For women diagnosed with GTD, blood tests are often used to
watch for side effects from chemotherapy. Blood cell counts are done to
watch the health of the bone marrow (where new blood cells are made),
and blood chemistry tests can be used to check the condition of the
liver and kidneys.
Imaging tests
Imaging tests use sound waves, x-rays, magnetic fields, or
radioactive substances to create pictures of the inside of your body.
Imaging tests may be done to help find out whether a tumor is present
and to learn how far it may have spread.
Ultrasound (sonogram)
Ultrasound can identify most cases of GTD, and will likely be
the first test done if your doctor suspects there may be a problem.
How it works: This
test uses sound waves to produce images of internal organs. A small
microphone-like instrument called a transducer gives
off sound waves and then picks up the echoes they make as they bounce
off body tissues. The echoes are converted into a black and white image
by a computer. That image is then displayed on a computer screen.
What it's like
to have the test: Ultrasound is an easy procedure. It
uses no radiation, which is why it is often used to look at developing
fetuses. During an ultrasound exam, you simply lie on a table while a
technician or doctor moves the transducer on the part of your body
being examined. Most ultrasounds are done with the transducer placed on
the skin after it is first lubricated with gel.
To diagnose GTD, a different type of ultrasound called transvaginal ultrasonography
is most often used. In this procedure, a small transducer is placed
into the vagina. This allows for good images of the uterus for women
suspected of having GTD during the first trimester of their pregnancy.
What doctors
look for: In a normal pregnancy, ultrasound imaging shows
a picture of the developing fetus inside the womb.
In a complete molar pregnancy, however, no fetus can be seen
on an ultrasound. Instead, the ultrasound detects the large, grape-like
swollen villi that are typical of GTD. Rarely, the ultrasound may show
a "twin" pregnancy in which one of the twins is a normal fetus and the
other is a hydatidiform mole. This occurs less than 1% of the time.
In a partial molar pregnancy, ultrasound can show an
abnormally formed placenta. If a fetus is seen, it is often deformed.
Ultrasound is also used to help find out if a mole is invading
local tissues. If blood levels of HCG are still elevated after the mole
has been removed, more exams may need to be done.
Chest x-ray
A chest x-ray may be done in cases of persistent GTD to see if
it has spread to your lungs, which is very unlikely unless your cancer
is far advanced. However, CT scans of the chest are done more often if
your doctor suspects persistent or advanced disease. Either test can be
done in any outpatient setting.
Computed tomography (CT) scan
The CT scan is an x-ray test that produces detailed
cross-sectional images of your body. Instead of taking one picture,
like a regular x-ray, a CT scanner takes many pictures as it rotates
around you while you lie on a table. A computer then combines these
pictures into images of slices of the part of your body being studied.
Unlike a regular x-ray, a CT scan creates detailed images of the soft
tissues in the body.
Before any pictures are taken, you may be asked to drink 1 to
2 pints of a liquid called "oral contrast." This helps outline the
intestine so that certain areas are not mistaken for tumors. You may
also receive an IV (intravenous) line through which a different kind of
contrast dye (IV contrast) is injected. This helps better outline
structures in your body.
The injection may cause some flushing (a feeling of warmth,
especially in the face). Some people are allergic and get hives.
Rarely, more serious reactions like trouble breathing or low blood
pressure can occur. Medicine can be given to prevent and treat allergic
reactions. Be sure to tell the doctor if you have ever had a reaction
to any contrast material used for x-rays.
CT scans take longer than regular x-rays. You need to lie
still on a table while they are being done. During the test, the table
moves in and out of the scanner, a ring-shaped machine that completely
surrounds the table. You might feel a bit confined by the ring you have
to lie in while the pictures are being taken.
This test may be done to see if the GTD has spread outside the
uterus, such as the lungs, brain, or liver. If your doctor suspects the
GTD has spread to any of these sites, a CT or MRI scan may be done.
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan
Like CT scans, MRI scans provide detailed images of soft
tissues in the body. But MRI scans use radio waves and strong magnets
instead of x-rays. The energy from the radio waves is absorbed and then
released in a pattern formed by the type of body tissue and by certain
diseases. A computer translates the pattern into a very detailed image
of parts of the body. A contrast material called gadolinium is often
injected into a vein before the scan to better see details.
MRI scans are a little more uncomfortable than CT scans.
First, they take longer -- often up to an hour. Second, you have to lie
inside a narrow tube, which is confining and can upset people with
claustrophobia (a fear of enclosed spaces). Newer, "open" MRI machines
can sometimes help with this if needed. The machine also makes buzzing
and clicking noises that you may find disturbing. Some centers provide
headphones with music to block this out.
MRI scans are most helpful in looking at the brain and spinal
cord. They are most likely to be used if persistent GTD has already
been found to have spread elsewhere, such as to the lungs.
Positron emission tomography (PET) scan
PET scans involve injecting a form of radioactive sugar (known
as fluorodeoxyglucose or FDG) into the blood. The amount of
radioactivity used is very low. Cancer cells in the body grow rapidly,
so they absorb large amounts of the radioactive sugar. A special camera
can then create a picture of areas of radioactivity in the body. The
picture is not finely detailed like a CT or MRI scan, but it provides
helpful information about your whole body.
PET scans are sometimes useful if your doctor thinks the
cancer may have spread (or returned after treatment) but doesn't know
where. PET scans can be used instead of several different imaging tests
because they scan your whole body. These tests are rarely used for GTD.
Some newer machines are able to perform both a PET and CT scan
at the same time (PET/CT scan). This allows the radiologist to compare
areas of higher radioactivity on the PET with the appearance of that
area on the CT.
Other tests
Doctors can often be fairly certain of a diagnosis of GTD
based on symptoms, blood test results, and imaging tests, but the
diagnosis is often made after a D&C in patients with abnormal
bleeding. The cells from the tumor are removed and viewed under a
microscope. The cells from different types of GTD each look different
under the microscope. Sometimes complete and partial moles may be hard
to tell apart when they are examined under the microscope early in the
first trimester. If so, other tests may be needed to distinguish the 2
types of mole. Some tests, called cytogenetics,
look at the number and type of chromosomes of the mole. Other tests may
look at certain genes that only come from the mother to see if it is a
partial mole versus a complete mole. (D&C is described in the
section, "Surgery")
Last Medical Review: 10/13/2009 Last Revised: 10/13/2009
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