Title: State of the Art: Gestational Trophoblastic Lesions
1State of the Art Gestational Trophoblastic
Lesions
- Treatment beyond single agents
- Barry Hancock
- (Sheffield, UK)
- International Gynecologic Society Meeting 2006
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5Which group of patients?
- Risk (WHO score, Dutch classification)
- Prognosis (Hammond)
- Stage (Song, FIGO)
- Choriocarcinoma risk (Japan)
- Criteria for treatment
6Two scenarios
- Single agent resistance
- High risk disease
7Single agent resistance
- Alternative single agent
- Combination chemotherapy
- (EMA-CO, MAC, EA etc)
8Single agent resistance
- For low risk non-metastatic disease single
agent chemotherapy is 60-90 successful - Second line multi-agent therapy is virtually
always (gt95) successful in dealing with single
agent resistance
9Is intensive chemotherapy necessary for all high
risk patients?
Benefits
Risks
? Higher CR
? Over treatment
? Less salvage treatment
? Higher financial costs
? Shorter treatment period
? More toxicity
10What is the evidence base?
- One randomized controlled trial
- Lots of small-moderate sized series
- One retrospective comparative study
11Primary treatment for high risk GTN
- MAC (MTX, dactinomycin, chlorambucil or
cyclophosphamide) - EMA-CO (etoposide, MTX, dactinomycin,
cyclophosphamide,
vincristine) - EMA/MEA
- CHAMOCA (cyclophosphamide, hydroxyurea,
dactinomycin, MTX,
vincristine, doxorubicin) - CHAMOMA ( melphalan)
- FME (FU, MTX, etoposide)
Previously single agent MTX!
12Primary remission rates in high risk GTN
- MAC 63-80
- CHAMOCA 82
- MAC vs CHAMOMA 73 vs 65
- EMA-CO gt80
- EMA/MEA/FME 75-80
13Salvage treatment in high risk GTN
- EMA-EP (EMA - etoposide, cisplatin)
- BEP (bleomycin, etoposide, cisplatin)
- CEC (cyclophosphamide, etoposide, cisplatin)
- MISC (high dose chemotherapy, carboplatin/paclitax
el, - paclitaxel/etoposide and paclitaxel/cisplatin
doublet) -
14Salvage treatment
15Surgery
16Toxicity
- EP-EMA
- CHAMOCA
- EMA-CO
- MAC
- EMA/MEA/FME
17Toxicity
- Multi-treated patients
- Potential mortality whatever is chosen
18Acute toxicity
- Alopecia
- Neutropenia
- Anemia
- Nausea/vomiting
- Stomatitis
- Neutropenic sepsis
- Thrombocytopenia
-
19Long-term toxicity
- Increased second malignancy
- Premature menopause
- Unknown!
20- Staff Nurse Ellen Zitek in BBCs Casualty
- Treated for cancer after a molar pregnancy
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22FIGO SCORING 0 1 2 4
Age lt 40 ? 40 - -
Antecedent pregnancy Mole Abortion Term -
Interval months from index pregnancy lt 4 4 - lt 7 7 - lt 13 ? 13
Pre-treatment serum hCG (IU/L) lt 103 103 - lt 104 104 - lt 105 ? 105
Largest tumour size (including uterus) cm lt 3 3 - lt 5 ? 5 -
Site of metastases Lung Spleen, kidney Gastro-intestinal Liver, brain
Number of metastases - 1-4 5-8 gt 8
Previous failed chemotherapy - - Single drug 2 or more drugs
23Chemotherapy for High Risk GTN(Sheffield UK)
M/AE
- Day 1 MTX 100mg/m2 iv Folinic acid
rescue - Day 8, 9, 10 Dactinomycin 500µg iv
- Etoposide 100mg/m2 iv
- et seq 7 days
24Sheffield Trophoblast Centre, UK1986-2005
Registration
8211
Persistent GTN
25Methotrexate resistant GTN
Median follow-up 8 years
Late deaths 0
2nd malignancy 0
Further pregnancy gt60
26High risk GTN
27Cure rates in GTN
1st line Salvage
Low risk (70-90) 75 99
High risk (10-30) 75 95
Overall 98 cure
28Conclusion
- The majority of patients are curable whatever
the risk or stage - It doesnt seem to matter which regimen you
choose as long as it works and you are familiar
with it! - Specialist center skills may be more important
than the actual therapy - But - occasional patients still die despite
multiple chemotherapy and surgical
interventions
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32Methotrexate in high riskGTN (Sheffield, UK
1973-86)
Median follow-up 24y
Late deaths 0
2nd malignancies 0
AVC - dactinomycin, vincristine, cyclophosphmide