When cancer
is diagnosed during pregnancy, several crucial questions arise: Will the
baby survive the mother's chemotherapy or radiation treatments? Will those
treatments increase the baby's risk of birth defects, childhood cancer,
or other health problems? If treatment is delayed, will the mother survive?
Another equally troubling but rarely considered question is: Could the
cancer affect the unborn child?
In a rare case, cancer from a young mother with lymphoma may have been
passed to the fetus, said Howard Weinstein, MD, the mother's primary physician
at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. A report on the case was published
in a recent issue of The New England Journal of Medicine (Vol. 341,
No. 2).
The 15-year-old mother showed no symptoms of illness until two weeks
before her due date. She was diagnosed with an aggressive case of lymphoma,
a cancer of the lymph nodes, and died 18 days after delivering a boy by
Cesarean section. Her baby soon showed signs of lymphoma and died two months
later.
"We were absolutely astounded," said Dr. Weinstein. "This happens very,
very rarely, and no one really knows why it happens. The placenta is a
pretty good barrier, especially for tumor cells. It was a mystery why this
happened to our patient."
In an accompanying editorial, Robert Resnick, MD, of the University
of California, San Diego, stated a recent review showed 19 cases of malignant
melanoma that had spread to the mother's placenta. "In five of these cases
the tumor extended into the fetus, which died of metastatic melanoma in
four of the five cases," Dr. Resnick wrote. Similarities in leukemia cells
in the mother and fetus were documented in the March 1, 1990, issue of
the journal Cancer by Sachiko Osada, MD, of the department of pediatrics,
and his colleagues at the Nagoya School of Medicine in Nagoya, Japan.
Cancer During Pregnancy: What are the Odds?
Although the chances of a mother and fetus sharing cancer cells are
extremely rare, cancer occurring during pregnancy is not particularly rare.
Cancer occurs in one of every 1,000 pregnancies, and half are tumors of
the uterine cervix, breast, or thyroid, which can spread to the placenta
but will not harm the fetus. Leukemia/lymphoma and melanoma cells are more
aggressive and seem more likely to get past the placenta, said Dr. Weinstein.
"There really is no documented proof about this," he added. "Our laboratory
reports represent the best evidence so far."
Cancer during pregnancy is typically a very treatable condition, said
Ralph Vogler, MD, scientific program director for the American Cancer Society
(ACS). "The majority of tumors are slow-growing tumors, and doctors may
wish to wait past the first trimester -- the most critical period -- before
starting chemotherapy." However, radiation doses can be fine-tuned so they
are safe for the fetus, even during the first trimester, he said.
"A cancer diagnosis is certainly not a death knell for mother or baby,"
added Dr. Vogler. "Very much can be done safely." ACS News Center stories are provided as a source of cancer-related
news and are not intended to be used as
press releases.
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