Case Reports in Women's Health (Jul 2020)

Hemoptysis as the first symptom in the diagnosis of metastatic choriocarcinoma in the third trimester of pregnancy: A case report

  • Leticia Álvarez-Sarrado,
  • Isabel González-Ballano,
  • Rebeca Herrero-Serrano,
  • Claudia Giménez-Molina,
  • Belén Rodríguez-Solanilla,
  • José-Manuel Campillos-Maza

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27
p. e00211

Abstract

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Introduction: Choriocarcinoma is a rare neoplasm (1/40000 pregnancies). In the context of a viable pregnancy, the incidence is even lower (1/160000). Case report: A woman in her second pregnancy was admitted at 31 + 6 weeks of gestation with hemoptysis and abnormal vaginal bleeding. Numerous placental venous lakes, bilateral pulmonary nodules and a pleural effusion were found. Pleural fluid β-HCG levels were elevated and a brain-chest-abdominal-pelvic CT scan led to the diagnosis of a high-risk gestational trophoblastic neoplasm. A caesarean section at 32 + 1 weeks of gestation was performed. Six cycles of an EMA-CO chemotherapy regime were administered. β-HCG levels normalized after 3 cycles. Placental histopathology confirmed the presence of a gestational choriocarcinoma. Conclusion: Choriocarcinoma is a highly aggressive tumor. In high-risk tumors, combination chemotherapy is the first-line treatment, offering high remission rates. Treatment response is evaluated by monitoring blood β-HCG levels, which should be long-term.

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