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Published byDustin Ashley Newman Modified over 9 years ago
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Avoiding the Pitfalls: 1st trimester pregnancy complications
Eve Espey, MD, MPH
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No financial disclosures
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Lecture Objectives Understand steps in diagnosis in women with bleeding, cramping and a positive pregnancy test Initiate appropriate management for miscarriage, ectopic and threatened abortion Understand medical and surgical approaches to the management of miscarriage and ectopic pregnancy
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The punch line… Don’t nuke a normal pregnancy or miss an ectopic
Place an IUD immediately after D&C for miscarriage
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The ER calls: “We’ve got a gal here with bleeding, pain and a positive pregnancy test”
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Puny differential…. Normal pregnancy Miscarriage Ectopic
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Few tools Ultrasound Quantitative hCG Experience Common sense Luck!
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But high impact… One of the top reasons OB-GYNs are sued: MTX given to a normal intrauterine pregnancy Ectopic pregnancy still causes maternal mortality Dealing with miscarriage in a sensitive way is paramount to women
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Landmarks in Early Pregnancy
Uterus outline Sub-chorionic bleed Embryo Yolk sac Gestational sac Choriodecidual reaction Vaginal Ultrasound Ultrasound can be useful in identifying an early intrauterine pregnancy before the procedure and its absence after the procedure. In pregnancies < 5 weeks, the gestational sac may be difficult to find. There will be a thick decidual shadow with an intra- or extra- uterine pregnancy. The features to look for when performing a vaginal ultrasound to determine gestational age for early abortion are: the presence of the gestational sac the presence of an embryonic structure the presence of the yolk sac the presence of cardiac activity.
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Transvaginal ultrasound: What you should see, when you should see it
5 weeks > Gestational sac (5mm) 6 weeks > Yolk sac 7 weeks > Cardiac motion Maintain a healthy skepticism about the date of the LMP
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Case 17 y/o G2P0 presents with bleeding, cramping, positive pregnancy test Differential Normal pregnancy Miscarriage Ectopic? At every step of the workup, I ask residents to consider what the differential is and has an ectopic been ruled out. Sac = 5 4/7 weeks
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Miscarriage vs. normal pregnancy? Quantitative hCG approach:
The AVERAGE hCG rise over 48 hours in a normal pregnancy is 124% Day 0 = 1,700 Day 2 = 4,400 Rise = 158% Likely diagnosis?
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What if the quants had been..?
Day 0 = 1,700 Day 2 = 2,200 Rise = 29% Likely diagnosis? The MINIMUM hCG rise over 48 hours in a normal pregnancy is 53%
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1st Trimester hCG J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1979;49:917
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Caveats 15% of women with IUP have an “abnormal” rise in hCG in the first 40 days 17% of ectopic pregnancies have a normal rise in hCGs over 48 hours at least once in early pregnancy Kadar et al.Obstet Gynecol 1981;58:162
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Case 32 y/o G2P1 at 7 weeks from LMP
Presents with bleeding, cramping, positive pregnancy test hCG = 5,277
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Discriminatory zone Transvaginal U/S Transabdominal U/S
Beta HCG = mIu/ml Transabdominal U/S Beta HCG = 3,600 mIu/ml If HCG > discriminatory zone and no gestational sac seen, consider ectopic pregnancy till proven otherwise
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Day 8 hCG = 580 Ultrasound:
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Oops! Ectopic pregnancy
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ECTOPIC PREGNANCY Most common cause of maternal death in early pregnancy 20 deaths per year in the US ,800 cases Fatality /10,000 ,800 cases Fatality /10,000 Risk factors: Prior tubal sterilization 10% Hx Salpingitis.....4X Linear salpingostomy X Ovulation induction.....4X Most cases have no known risk factor! Minority race
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Ectopic: Management options
Laparoscopy Salpingostomy 5-20% persistent ectopic Monitor with hCG to 0 Treat with MTX Salpingectomy Laparotomy Medical management Expectant management
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Medical management of ectopic pregnancy using Methotrexate:
Single, two or multi-dose regimens Reported success: 71%-94% Patient selection Stable No IUP on ultrasound or villi on D&C Labs normal: AST, WBC, platelets, creatinine Relative contraindications hCG > 5,000 Cardiac activity in the tube Sac > 3.5 cm
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Single dose MTX Day 0: hCG, CBC, Platelets, Rh, AST, Cr
Day 0: MTX 50mg/m2 IM Day 4: Quantitative hCG Day 7: Quantitative hCG If HCG does not decrease by at least 15% from Day 4, repeat MTX Weekly hCG until < 5
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Failure…. If pretreatment Bhcg >5000 failure rate is around 14%
Consider two-dose regimen if Bhcg >5000
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Fertility following treatment for ectopic pregnancy
Author Tx IUP Repeat ectopic Sherman 1982 Salpingectomy % 6% Sherman 1982 Salpingostomy 83% 6% Stovall Medical % 9%
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Miscarriage
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Spontaneous abortion About 25% of women experience a miscarriage.
Approximately 15% of clinically recognized pregnancies spontaneously abort in the first or early second trimester. Up to 33% of all pregnancies end in miscarriage.
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Management options for miscarriage
Expectant management Misoprostol D&C Suction MVA
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Misoprostol for miscarriage Pooled outcomes
Treatemtent Success rates Placebo 16-60% Single dose misoprostol 25-88% Repeat dose x 1 if incomplete at 24 hours 80-88% Success rate depends on type of miscarriage -100% with incomplete abortion - 87% for all others Wood SL, Obstet Gynecol 2002; Bagratee JS, Hum Reproduct 2004; Blohm F, BJOG: Int J Obstet Gynecol 2005
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Misoprostol for miscarriage: Note – off label use!
Gestational sac or CRL up to 10 weeks No embryo or no fetal cardiac activity Rh, hematocrit 800 mcg misoprostol x 2 doses Intravaginal home administration x 1 dose Repeat after 24 hours if no tissue Ibuprofen + Tylenol with codeine If no passage within a week, RTC for options
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Suction curettage
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Manual Vacuum Aspirator (MVA)
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Anesthesia options “Vocal local” Oral analgesia + paracervical block
Ibuprofen 800 mg Percocet and 1 mg lorazepam IV sedation + paracervical block + Fentanyl mcg Midazolam 1-2 mg Regional anesthesia (spinal) General anesthesia or deep sedation CORE SLIDE
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A hair-raising tale: 31 y/o G3P2 presents to ER with “severe LLQ pain” and positive pregnancy test Benign pelvic exam, + hCG Ultrasound: “No IUP, left adnexal mass with surrounding echogenic fluid and free fluid in pelvis concerning for ruptured ectopic” hCG = 1,003
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Day 0 Ectopic pregnancy vs. early IUP Offered methotrexate
Patient declined: desired pregnancy Plan: Repeat hCG in 48 hours
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Day 1 assessment Continued pain, back to emergency room
HR 93, BP 148/71, bilateral adnexal tenderness and rebound Ultrasound: “Small hypoechoic focus in uterus, possible pseudosac. Left adnexal mass with interval development of heterogeneous material/free fluid” hCG: 1,419 (55% rise)
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Day #1 management Laparoscopy
400 cc hemoperitoneum, “no active bleeding site determined” Attempted salpingostomy followed by left salpingectomy Discharged on POD #1
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Day #7 Pathology sent on Day #1 Checked on Day #7 Pathology
Gross: Sectioning through this area demonstrates “presumed villi” Microscopic diagnosis: “No chorionic tissue, no evidence of intratubal gestation
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Day 7 Patient called: “final pathology negative for POCs” hCG: 9,417
Triage ultrasound: “Gestational sac measuring 6 weeks, minimal free fluid, right ovary 2.9 cm, circumferential flow, hypoechoic cystic structure within ovary measuring 2 cm, no embryonic pole, no embryonic fetal heart motion.”
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Day #7: Management Diagnosis: Presumed ongoing ectopic
Radiology ultrasound was ordered but not available since it was the weekend. Given a concerning picture for ectopic, methotrexate was recommended IM MTX 50 mg/m2 Day #11 hCG = 15,168 – not checked, F/U day #14 (7 days after MTX given)
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Follow-up Day #14 Day #18 Day #25 Day #30
Ultrasound: 6 ½ week IUP with positive fetal heart motion in the 120s Patient counseled re MTX in setting of normal IUP Day #18 Ultrasound: CRL consistent with 6 ½ weeks with FHM ranging from bpm Day #25 Ultrasound: CRL consistent with 6 ½ weeks with no FHM Requests misoprostol for management Day #30 Empty uterus, Paragard IUD placed
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Multiple problems “Offered” MTX (instead of dx LSC) on Day 0 with a desired pregnancy Laparoscopy: No active bleeding? Checked pathology on Day 7 Incorrect interpretation of hCG of 9,417 with no fetal heart motion MTX given based on an inadequate U/S Day #11 hCG not checked till Day #14
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The devil is in the details
hCG and pathology follow-up Beta book system Continuity of physician teams seeing the patient Context—patient course, hCGs and U/S
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Classic missed opportunity
Ovulation may occur within 10 days Don’t forget contraception Half of pregnancies are unintended May wish to delay another pregnancy even if intended
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IUD insertion after 1st trimester uterine aspiration
> 700 women undergoing D&C (abortion and miscarriage) from 5-12 weeks Randomized to immediate vs. delayed IUD insertion No significant difference in expulsion risk: 4.5% immediate 2.7% delayed No increase in other complications Bednarek, NEJM 2011
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Summary Be meticulous in follow-up of first trimester complications
Consider misoprostol and MVA for treatment Don’t forget the IUD!
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