Gynecologic Oncology Reports (Aug 2016)

A non-pregnant woman with elevated beta-HCG: A case of para-neoplastic syndrome in ovarian cancer

  • Jennifer Goldstein,
  • Prasamsa Pandey,
  • Nicole Fleming,
  • Shannon Westin,
  • Sarina Piha-Paul

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gore.2016.05.004
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. C
pp. 49 – 52

Abstract

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There is a broad range of possible diagnoses for an elevated beta human chorionic gonadotropin (β-hCG) in the absence of intrauterine or ectopic pregnancy. When women of child bearing potential undergo evaluation for clinical trial, it is often unclear what course of evaluation to take when a pregnancy test is positive. We describe the clinical course of a patient with widely metastatic mucinous ovarian carcinoma with metastasis to the peritoneum, lymph nodes and liver. The patient was found to have a mildly elevated β-hCG during initial evaluation for clinical trial. Extensive work up for ectopic pregnancy, trophoblastic disease, and phantom β-hCG were negative. The patient's β-hCG levels continued to rise until initiation of therapy. She was treated on a phase I protocol with restaging scans revealing a partial response. The β-hCG was retested and declined in conjunction with her response, consistent with paraneoplastic β-hCG. Here, we propose a decision making algorithm to evaluate a patient with an elevated β-hCG undergoing assessment for clinical trial.

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