METASTATIC GESTATIONAL TROPHOBLASTIC DISEASE - EXPERIENCE AT THE NEW-ENGLAND TROPHOBLASTIC DISEASE CENTER, 1965 TO 1985

  • 1 March 1987
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 69  (3) , 390-395
Abstract
This report reviews the results of therapy in 93 patients with metastatic gestational trophoblastic tumor treated from 1965-1985. Complete remission was achieved in all 42 patients with low-risk metastatic disease and in 34 of 51 patients (67%) with high-risk metastatic disease. Single-agent chemotherapy induced complete remission in 38 of 42 patients (91%) with low-risk metastatic disease. Survival of high-risk patients has improved markedly over the past two decades; complete remission was attained in 13 of 24 high-risk patients (54%) from 1965-1975, and in 21 of 27 (78%) from 1976-1985. Survival correlated with the number of high-risk factors, the prognostic score, and the type of treatment. From 1965-1975, 54% (13 of 24) of high-risk patients were treated with single-agent chemotherapy alone, while in the last decade only 75 (two of 27) were so treated. Twenty-one patients with traditional high-risk factors had a prognostic score of 7 or less, and all achieved remission, with 67% (14 of 21) treated with primary single-agent chemotherapy. The prognostic scoring system was more effective than traditional high-risk criteria at predicting which patients require intensive combination chemotherapy to attain remission.