Hydatidiform Mole
Basics
Basics
Basics
Description
Description
- A gestational trophoblastic disease (GTD), which originates from the placenta and can locally invade the uterus and/or metastasize
- Tumor arises from gestational rather than maternal tissue
- Potential to develop into a malignancy:
- Gestational trophoblastic neoplasia (GTN)
- Complete mole:
- Estimated in 1/1,500 pregnancies
- Fetal tissue not present
- Diffuse chorionic villi swelling
- Diffuse trophoblastic hyperplasia
- Malignancy develops in 15–20%:
- If metastasizes, usually to lung
- Genetics:
- Karyotype: 46XX (80%); 46XY (20%)
- Paternal DNA expressed
- Enucleate egg fertilized by 2 sperm or by a haploid sperm that duplicates
- Partial mole:
- Estimated in 1/750 pregnancies
- Fetal or embryonic tissue often present
- Focal chorionic villi swelling
- Focal trophoblastic hyperplasia
- Malignancy develops in 1–5%
- Genetics:
- Karyotype: 90% are triploid 69XXX, 69XXY, rarely 69XYY
- Maternal and paternal DNA
- Haploid ovum fertilized by 2 sperms or haploid ovum duplicates and is fertilized by normal sperm
- Twinning with normal pregnancy possible w/partial mole:
- Higher risk for persistent maternal disease and metastasis
- Possible to have normal infant
Etiology
Etiology
- Largely unknown
- Risk factors:
- Extremes of maternal age best estimated risk factor:
- >35 yr old carries 2–7.5-fold risk
- <15 yr old
- Previous molar pregnancy carries 1–2% risk in future pregnancies (10–15 times the risk for general population)
- Deficiency in animal fat and vitamin A
- Smoking (>15 cigs/d)
- Maternal blood type AB, A, or B
- History of infertility and/or spontaneous abortions
- Varies based on geography:
- Asian countries have highest risk
- U.S. and Western Europe have lowest risk (1 per 1,000–1,500 live births)
- Reported up to 1 per 12–500 live births in other countries
- Finding in 1 of 600 therapeutic abortions
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