Cornual ectopic case series

AnkurShah10 2,861 views 32 slides May 05, 2015
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About This Presentation

A case series on Cornual (Interstitial) Ectopic Pregnancy


Slide Content

Interstitial (Cornual) Pregnancy
A Case Series

Case 1

33 yr old G4P1L1A1E1 at 7 wk POG

Post LSCS pregnancy

Case of secondary infertility, conceived post OI

LMP 8/1/2010, Cycles regular

h/o Rt ectopic pregnancy ruptured, partial
salpingectomy done

OPD visit for booking of present pregnancy


O/E – Vitals stable

P/A – soft, non-tender, NAD

P/V – uterus 6 wk size, no fornyceal tenderness, no
adnexal mass

TVS
-SLIUF, FCA +, CRL – 7w
-Lt cornual pregnancy


Plan: Medical management with Inj Methotrexate

Inj Methotrexate 50 mg on Day 1, 3, 5, 7

Inj Leucovorin 5 mg on Day 2, 4, 6, 8

TVS on Day 6:
-SLIUF, FCA +


Plan: KCl instillation in fetal heart

Under GA, Inj KCl administered inside Gest Sac

Intra-op/Post-op uneventful

Pt passed fleshy mass P/V on Day 10

Β-HCG – 7300 uIU/ml

Pt discharged and on subsequent follow up showed
complete absorption of sac with resolution of HCG
levels

Case 2

42 yr old G5P4L4 at 7 wk POG

Willing for MTP + Lapster

Offers no complaints

LMP – 10/11/2010, Cycles Regular

O/E – Vitals stable

P/A – soft, non-tender, NAD

P/V – uterus 8 wk size, No adnexal mass, no
fornyceal tenderness


Trans-Abdominal Sonography
-SIUGS, FCA+, CRL 7wk
-Eccentrically placed in fundus
-?Septate uterus

Transvaginal Sonography
-SIUGS, FCA+, CRL 7 wk
-Rt cornual pregnancy


Plan: Conservative management with Inj KCl
instillation in fetal heart

Under GA, TVS guided instillation of Inj KCl done

Intra-op/Post-op – uneventful

Repeat TVS
-SIUGS with crenated margin, No FCA, No free fluid in
POD

S. β-HCG – 56714 uIU/ml


Plan: Combined management with systemic
Methotrexate

Started on
-Inj Methotrexate 60 mg: Day 1, 3, 5, 7
-Inj Leucovorin 6 mg: Day 2, 4, 6, 8

S. β-HCG on Day 11 – 3713 uIU/ml

Pt discharged and on subsequent follow up showed
resolution of sac and β-HCG values

Case 3

27 yr old

G5A4 at 6 wk 5 d POG, Post IUI pregnancy

LMP 11/5/2014, Cycles regular

Admitted for safe confiment with USG finding of
Rt cornual pregnancy

No c/o pain abdomen, bleeding P/V


On Examination:
-General Condition Fair
-PR 84/min normal volume, regular
-BP 134/80 mm HG
-No Pallor

Systemic Examination:
-RS/CVS: NAD
-P/A: Soft, nontender, no organomegaly
-P/S: No active bleeding


G5A4 lady at 6w5d POG, Post IUI pregnancy Rt
Interstitial Pregnancy

Plan
-Fertility preservation
-Medical Management with Inj Methotrexate


Multi-dose regime
-Inj Methotrexate 1 mg/kg on Day 1, 3, 5, 7, 9
-Inj Leucovorin 0.1 mg/kg on Day 2, 4, 6, 8, 10

S. β HCG levels:
-Day 5: 14641 uIU/ml
-Day 10: 10064 uIU/ml


USG done on Day 12:
-Rt cornual pregnancy
-Colour echoes absent
-Sac with GSD of 5w6d

Plan:
-Intrasac Methotrexate instillation


Day 13:
-Under TVS guidance, 50 mg of methotrexate instilled
in amniotic sac with aspiration of fluid

Day 16:
-S. β HCG: 3000 uIU/ml
-TVS: Thick ET, No IUGS seen

Pt asymptomatic and discharged

INTERSTITIAL (CORNUAL) PREGNANCY


Ectopic Pregnancy – first recognised by Busiere in
1693

One of the serious complications of pregnancy

Leading cause of early pregnancy-related death

Early diagnosis possible with advances in USG and
highly sensitive HCG assays
-Higher incidence of ectopic
-Decline in case fatality rate
Rock J A, Jones H W “Telinde's Operative Gynaecolgy”, 10
th
edn, Wolters Kluwer

Cunningham et al “William's Obstetrics”, 23
rd
edn, The McGraw Hill Companies


Interstitial vs Cornual pregnancy
-True interstitial pregnancy
-Pregnancy in one horn or septate uterus
-Angular pregnancy

Presenting symptoms
-Acute abdominal pain
-Low hematocrit
-Intraperitoneal bleed
-Positive serum or urine pregnancy test
B Rizk et al “Challenges in the diagnosis and management of interstitial and cornual
ectopic pregnancies”. J Mid East Fert Soc (2013) 18:235-240
Rock J A, Jones H W “Telinde's Operative Gynaecolgy”, 10
th
edn, Wolters Kluwer


Transvaginal sonographic criteria for diagnosis:
-Empty uterine cavity
-Chorionic sac seen >1cm from the most lateral edge of the
uterine cavity
-Thin myometrial layer surrounding the chorionic sac

“Interstitial line sign”
-Echogenic line extending from endometrial cavity to cornual
region, bordering the margins of the gestational sac

99% specificity, 80% sensitivity
Timor-Tritsch IE et al “Sonographic evaluation of cornual pregnancies treated without
surgery” Obstet Gynsecol (1992) 79:1044-49
B Rizk et al “Challenges in the diagnosis and management of interstitial and cornual
ectopic pregnancies”. J Mid East Fert Soc (2013) 18:235-240


Delayed risk of rupture (>12 weeks) due to
protective effect of myometrium?
-Rupture could happen at any time of pregnancy
-Profound hemorrhage and collapse

Cornu: anastomosis of uterine and ovarian vessels
Tulandi and Al-Jaroudi. Interstitial Pregnancy: Results generated from the Society
of Reproductive Surgeon registry. Obstet Gynecol (2004) 103 (1): 47-50


Management
-Depends on:

Hemodynamic status of patient (ruptured or unruptured)

Size of gestation
-Modes of management

Surgical

Medical

Expectant
Faraj R, Steel M. Management of cornual (interstitial) pregnancy. The Obstetrician &
Gynaecologist 2007;9:249–255


Methotrexate first used for medical management of ectopic
in 1982

Many reports of medical management of cornual pregnancy,
but no consensus on best plan

Success rate of 83%

Use of methotrexate
-Systemic
-Local injection

Single dose vs multi-dose regime
J D Fisch et al. Medical Management of interstitial ectopic pregnancy: a case report
and literature review. Hum Repr (13)7: 1981-86


RCOG recommendation:
-Patient selection

Hemodynamically stable

No evidence of reupture

HCG levels <3000
-Single dose methotrexate

Second dose depending on initial level of HCG (> 5000)

Lecovorin rescue not needed

Our Recommendation
Faraj R, Steel M. Management of cornual (interstitial) pregnancy. The Obstetrician &
Gynaecologist 2007;9:249–255

THANK YOU