Literature DB >> 23059744

Treatment outcomes for 618 women with gestational trophoblastic tumours following a molar pregnancy at the Charing Cross Hospital, 2000-2009.

A Sita-Lumsden1, D Short, I Lindsay, N J Sebire, D Adjogatse, M J Seckl, P M Savage.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Post-molar pregnancy gestational trophoblastic tumours (GTT) have been curable with chemotherapy treatment for over 50 years. Because of the rarity of the diagnosis, detailed structured information on prognosis, treatment escalations and outcome is limited.
METHODS: We have reviewed the demographics, prognostic variables, treatment course and clinical outcomes for the post-mole GTT patients treated at Charing Cross Hospital between 2000 and 2009.
RESULTS: Of the 618 women studied, 547 had a diagnosis of complete mole, 13 complete mole with a twin conception and 58 partial moles. At the commencement of treatment, 94% of patients were in the FIGO low-risk group (score 0-6). For patients treated with single-agent methotrexate, the primary cure rate ranged from 75% for a FIGO score of 0-1 through to 31% for those with a FIGO score of 6.
CONCLUSION: In the setting of a formal follow-up programme, the expected cure rate for GTT after a molar pregnancy should be 100%. Prompt treatment and diagnosis should limit the exposure of most patients to combination chemotherapy. Because of the post-treatment relapse rate of 3% post-chemotherapy, hCG monitoring should be performed routinely.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2012        PMID: 23059744      PMCID: PMC3504950          DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2012.462

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Cancer        ISSN: 0007-0920            Impact factor:   7.640


Gestational trophoblastic tumours (GTT) form a family of rare diagnoses, including molar pregnancies, invasive mole, choriocarcinoma and placental site tumours. These are each characterised as arising from the cells of conception producing hCG and having extremely high sensitivity to chemotherapy (Seckl ). Although these tumours are rare, they have been routinely curable with treatment for over 50 years (Hertz ). One of the main considerations of current treatments is to maintain cure rates, while minimising exposure to excess chemotherapy, in view of the potential negative effects on fertility and future second tumour risks (Rustin ; Bower ). In the United Kingdom, all patients diagnosed with a molar pregnancy are registered centrally for hCG monitoring and followed up, with the patients requiring treatment receiving care in the two units at Charing Cross Hospital in London and Weston Park Hospital in Sheffield. This centralised approach to care has allowed the development of considerable clinical experience and the collection of accurate data on outcomes from large numbers of patients (Bower ; McNeish ; El-Helw ). Despite the overall high cure rates in GTT, there remain some areas of ongoing clinical debate. These include the optimum schedule of methotrexate (MTX) administration, the comparative benefits of single-agent therapy with MTX or dactinomycin for low-risk patients and the appropriate point to locate the cut-off values between low- and high (or intermediate)-risk patients, and hence their initial treatments. However, the development of routinely curative chemotherapy for GTT predates the introduction of randomised clinical trials in cancer treatment by a number of decades, and as these rare illnesses have extremely high cure rates with their established therapies, developing prospective trials remains challenging (Alazzam ; Lertkhachonsuk ). In this paper we present the demographics, disease stage, prognostic scores and treatment outcomes for 618 women treated for post-molar pregnancy GTT at Charing Cross Hospital in the decade 2000–2009. The data in this series may be of value in designing clinical trials, discussing individual risks and treatment options with patients, and supporting the development of centralised services in other countries.

Patients and methods

Patient database and selection

The electronic database of the Trophoblastic Disease Centre at Charing Cross Hospital in London was reviewed for all cases of GTT following molar pregnancies treated between 2000 and 2009. The patients included in this series all had a prior uterine evacuation, confirmed molar histology, met the Charing Cross Hospital guidelines for treatment and had a follow-up of at least 1 year after the completion of therapy. The guideline indications for treatment after a molar pregnancy include the following components: heavy PV bleeding, rising hCG levels over a 2- to 4-week period, an hCG plateau of 4 weeks or longer, or a serum hCG level >20 000 IU l−1 more than 4 weeks after evacuation (Savage ). Patients meeting these criteria were then assessed according to the FIGO scoring system as shown in Table 1, and grouped as either low risk (0 to 6) or high risk (>6; Ngan ).
Table 1

The FIGO Prognostic Scoring System for gestational trophoblast tumours

FIGO scoring 0 1 2 4
Age (years)<40>40
Antecedent pregnancyMoleAbortionTerm
Interval months from end of index pregnancy to treatment<44⩽77⩽13>13
Pretreatment serum hCG (IU l−1)<103103⩽104104⩽105>105
Largest tumour size, including uterus (cm)<33⩽5>5
Size of metastasisLungSpleen, kidneyGastro-intestinalLiver, brain
Number of metastases1–45–8>8
Previous failed chemotherapySingle drugTwo or more drugs

Abbreviation: FIGO=Fédération Internationale de Gynécologie et d'Obstétrique.

Patient with a total score of 0–6 fall into the low-risk prognostic group, scores of 7 and over are in the high-risk group.

Pre-treatment assessment

All patients were assessed clinically with a Doppler ultrasound scan of the pelvis, a chest X-ray (CXR) and an updated serum hCG level. On the basis of this assessment, patients were given a prognostic score according to the FIGO scoring system. All patients with pulmonary metastases visible on the CXR went on to have a CT scan of the chest, abdomen and pelvis, and a brain MRI scan.

Treatment protocols

The standard first-line therapy for patients with a FIGO score of 6 or lower was the Charing Cross Hospital MTX and folinic acid (FA) regimen. A small number of patients with adverse characteristics, such as heavy bleeding, hCG levels over 250 000 IU l−1 or a contraindication to intramuscular administration were commenced on first-line treatment with either D1-5 dactinomycin or the EMA–CO combination regimen. Patients with CXR-detected pulmonary metastases received CNS prophylaxis with intrathecal MTX (12.5 mg) every 2 weeks for three doses, with treatment timed to coincide shortly after one of the i.m. doses of MTX. During treatment, patients had their serum hCG levels measured twice weekly, and three static or two rising hCG values were defined as drug-resistant disease and the patient was changed to a more intensive therapy. The next treatment regimen was determined by their current hCG levels, with those with hCG levels <300 IU l−1 receiving single-agent dactinomycin and those with hCG levels of>300 IU l−1 commencing on EMA–CO. Patients developing second-line resistance to dactinomycin were changed on EMA–CO chemotherapy. For the small number of post-molar pregnancy patients scoring in the high-risk category (WHO score >6), the first-line treatment was the EMA–CO regimen. Any of these high-risk patients who developed resistance or excessive toxicity were changed to the taxoletoposide/taxolcisplatin (TE/TP) doublet regimen (Wang ). In all cases, chemotherapy treatment was continued until normalisation of serum hCG level (<5 IU l−1) and then for an additional 6 weeks of consolidation therapy. For a small number of patients with drug-resistant disease or relapse localised to the uterus, a hysterectomy was performed. After completing chemotherapy, lifelong hCG follow-up was commenced and patients were defined as having had a relapse if, in the absence of a new pregnancy, hCG levels start to rise after the hCG level has been in the normal range for 6 weeks.

Treatment regimens

Methotrexate/folinic acid

MTX 50 mg i.m. days 1, 3, 5 and 7, and FA tablet 15 mg days 2, 4, 6 and 8, repeated every 14 days.

Dactinomycin

Dactinomycin 0.5 mg i.v. days 1–5, repeated every 14 days.

EMA–CO

D1: etoposide 100 mg m−2, dactinomycin 0.5 mg, MTX 300 mg m−2. D2: etoposide 100 mg m−2, dactinomycin 0.5 mg. D8: cyclophosphamide 600 mg m−2, vincristine 0.8 mg m−2, repeated every 14 days.

Results

Patients treated and FIGO scores

Between 2000 and 2009, 9010 women with molar pregnancies were registered for screening at the Charing Cross Hospital. During this 10-year-period, a total of 746 patients were treated at the Charing Cross Hospital for GTT, following a molar pregnancy; and of these, 128 have been excluded from this study primarily because of overseas residence, unverified histology or incomplete follow-up. Of the remaining 618 post-mole GTT patients, 91% had a diagnosis of a prior complete molar pregnancy and 9% developed GTT following a partial molar pregnancy. The median age at the start of treatment was 32 years, with an overall age range between 15 and 56 years. The results of the FIGO prognostic scoring are shown in Table 2, with 579 (94%) of the 618 patients falling into the low-risk (0–6 FIGO score) category and only 39 (6%) patients of the study population falling into the high-risk group.
Table 2

The FIGO prognostic score analysis of the 618 women treated for GTT following a molar pregnancy at the Charing Cross Hospital, 2000–2009

FIGO score Patient number (%) FIGO score Patient number (%)
053 (8.6)720 (3.2)
190 (14.6)812 (1.9)
2122 (19.8)94 (0.6)
3138 (22.3)103 (0.5)
496 (15.5)
549 (7.9)
631 (5.0)
Total low risk579 (93.7)Total high risk39 (6.3)

Abbreviations: FIGO=Fédération Internationale de Gynécologie et d'Obstétrique; GTT=gestational trophoblastic tumour.

Treatment outcomes

Low-risk group

The overall results of the low-risk treatment group of patients are shown in Table 3. For the 579 FIGO low-risk score patients, 554 patients received first-line treatment with MTX/FA, with 316 patients successfully completing their therapy using this regimen alone, producing an overall successful treatment rate of 57%. For the 238 patients who started MTX/FA but required more intensive treatment, the choice of second-line treatment was dependent on the hCG level at the time of the introduction of the second-line treatment. For patients with an hCG level under 300 IU l−1 single-agent dactinomycin was the standard treatment, whereas for women with an hCG level in excess of 300 IU l−1 at the time of treatment escalation EMA–CO was the treatment choice. Of the 96 patients treated with the second-line dactinomycin regimen 91 (95%), completed their treatment successfully without requiring additional therapy. For the 142 MTX/FA patients receiving second-line treatment with EMA–CO, only 2 required a further treatment change in both cases to TE/TP because of excess EMA–CO toxicity.
Table 3

The overall treatment results for the 618 women treated for GTT after a molar pregnancy

Low-risk FIGO 06Highrisk FIGO 710
  Number Success (%)   Number Success (%)
First-line chemotherapy (579) First-line chemotherapy (39)
MTX/FA55457MTX/FA30
Dactinomycin333EMA–CO3692
EMA–CO22100
      
Second-line chemotherapy (238) Second-line chemotherapy (6)
Dactinomycin9694EMA–CO3100
EMA–CO14299TE/TP333
      
Thirdline chemotherapy (7) Third-line treatment (2)
EMA–CO5100Hysterectomy2100
TE/TP2100   

Abbreviations: EMA–CO=etoposide, MTX, actinomycin D, cyclophosphamide, vincristine; FA=folinic acid; FIGO=Fédération Internationale de Gynécologie et d'Obstétrique; GTT=gestational trophoblastic tumour; MTX=methotrexate; TE=taxol–etoposide; TP=taxol–cisplatin.

The table shows the outcomes separately for the 579 women in the low-risk prognostic groups and 39 high-risk patients. All the patients in both groups were cured.

Alongside the majority of FIGO low-risk patients starting treatment with MTX/FA, three low-risk patients received single-agent dactinomycin as their first-line treatment, with two of them requiring additional EMA–CO second-line treatment. As a result of either heavy bleeding, patient choice or concerns regarding the role of MTX/FA in patients with very high hCG levels, 22 low-risk patients were electively started on first-line therapy with EMA–CO, and all were successfully treated with this as their first-line therapy as reported in a previous publication (McGrath ).

High-risk group

High-risk disease with a FIGO score in excess of 6 is relatively rare in the post-mole GTT population, with only 39 (6%) patients in this group. Of these, three chose to have first-line treatment with MTX/FA, which was unsuccessful in all. These patients were then successfully cured with EMA–CO. From the 36 high-risk patients starting with first-line EMA–CO treatment, 33 were cured with this regimen, with the other 3 successfully treated with a change to either cisplatin-based chemotherapy or hysterectomy.

Response by FIGO prognostic score and disease sites

The treatment outcomes of all 618 patients were analysed according to their FIGO prognostic scores as shown in Table 4. This demonstrates the reducing efficacy of MTX/FA with the increasing prognostic score. For patients with a FIGO score of 0 and 1, the primary success rate is 75%, but falls to less than 50% for patients with FIGO scores of 3–5. For patients with a FIGO score of 6 treated with MTX/FA, the primary success rate is 31% however, it is apparent that only half of this group started on MTX/FA with the others starting directly with more intensive first-line therapies so potentially, positively biasing this result.
Table 4

The successful treatment rates for single-agent MTX/FA chemotherapy and second-line therapies grouped by the patients FIGO prognostic score

FIGO score First-line MTX/FA Success rate (%) Second-line dactinomycin Success rate (%) Second-line EMA–CO Success rate (%) Third-line EMA–CO Success rate (%)
0537712921100
18974151008100
2122671486261002100
3138472893451002100
493452110030100
54335510023100
6163111001090
73003100
Total557       

Abbreviations: EMA–CO=etoposide, MTX, actinomycin D, cyclophosphamide, vincristine; FA=folinic acid; FIGO=Fédération Internationale de Gynécologie et d'Obstétrique; MTX=methotrexate.

The treatment results were also analysed according to the documented sites of disease as shown in Table 5. This demonstrates that from the total of 618 patients, 83 (13.5%) had no visible tumour mass on their routine imaging and that the large majority, 76%, had disease limited to the uterus. The spread of disease beyond the pelvis was rare, occurring in just 10% of the patients, with the lungs being the only documented site of disease. The declining success rate with first-line MTX/FA with more advanced stage matches closely with the results of the FIGO score, ranging from 74% for those with no visible tumour to 55% for patients with disease limited to the uterus, and falling to 36% for patients with lung metastases visible on their CXR.
Table 5

The breakdown of the disease clinical stage and successful treatment rate for MTX/FA for the 618 post-molar pregnancy GTT patients

Disease site Patients (%) Median hCG (IU l−1) First-line treatment with MTX/FA First-line MTX/FA success rate (%)
hCG only58 (9)3025874
Uterine vascularity with no mass25 (4)23882556
Uterine mass467 (76)16 57143057
Uterus and adnexae7 (1)27 019540
Uterus and lungs61 (10)24 1173936
Total618 557 

Abbreviations: FA=folinic acid; GTT=gestational trophoblastic tumour; GTT=gestational trophoblastic tumour; hCG=human chorionic gonadotropin; MTX=methotrexate.

Relapses

As shown in Table 6, there were 18 relapses from the 618 patients giving an overall risk of relapse of approximately 3%. All the patients who relapsed had originally been within the FIGO 0–5 score groups. Treatment had been with MTX/FA alone in nine of them and combined with either dactinomycin or EMA–CO for the others.
Table 6

The relapse rates for patients after apparently successful initial treatment for post-molar pregnancy GTT

Treatment group Relapse Total %
All low-risk patients185793.1
MTX/FA93132.9
MTX and actino6996.1
MTX and EMA–CO31432.8

Abbreviations: EMA–CO=etoposide, MTX, actinomycin D, cyclophosphamide, vincristine; FA=folinic acid; GTT=gestational trophoblastic tumour; MTX=methotrexate.

On relapse, 13 of the patients received EMA-CO treatment to achieve cure, 4 had chemotherapy with the TE/TP regimen and 2 patients underwent a hysterectomy. All of the relapse patients were successfully salvaged and cured.

Discussion

Gestational trophoblast tumours occurring after a molar pregnancy have been routinely curable with chemotherapy for over 50 years (Hertz ). However, these tumours are rare in any individual hospital and their effective treatment considerably predates the modern era of randomised clinical trials. As a result, the current standard treatment protocols are based on empirical observations but are supported by a number of larger treatment series, such as this and others, published both by our group and other GTT units (McNeish ; El-Helw ; Fulop ). Overall post-mole GTT is an illness in which the expectation from treatment is one of cure; the data in this study demonstrates in Table 3 that all 618 patients were successfully treated. The majority of patients only required treatment with low-toxicity single-agent chemotherapy, whereas 34% of patients required combination chemotherapy, and only 2 patients required a hysterectomy. This data is similar to our previous cohort and for other treatment series, both from the GTT service in Sheffield (El-Helw ), and other centres in Europe (Chalouhi ; Fulop ), Asia (Kang ) and North America (Hoekstra ; Growdon ). The standard assessment of GTT patients includes the FIGO prognostic score, which is based on a number of key clinical parameters and allows an estimate of the likely first-line cure rate with the low-intensity single-agent drug treatment. During the study period, 94% of the post-molar pregnancy GTT patients fell into the FIGO low-risk grouping. The value of the prognostic scoring is reflected in a falling success rate of first-line therapy with a rising FIGO score. For FIGO scores 0 and 1, the rate is 75% but falls to just under 50% for groups 3–5, whereas for patients in the prognostic score 6 group the success rate for MTX/FA was 31%. However, almost 50% of this prognostic score group were electively treated with more intensive chemotherapy from the outset, as they were judged unlikely to respond satisfactorily to MTX/FA. As a result, it is likely that true overall success rate for MTX/FA in FIGO score 6 patients could be considerably lower. The management of patients with prognostic scores of 4–6 has been an area of debate, with some groups treating these patients as an ‘intermediate-risk group’ and receiving first-line treatment with dactinomycin (McNeish ). Currently, the debate regarding the more formal introduction of the intermediate grouping is ongoing (Aghajanian, 2011) and a multicentre trial examining the comparative benefits of MTX and actinomycin is opening shortly. The data in this paper may help reflect what the results of the current MTX/FA-based treatment delivers and support the discussion on the subject. Although the FIGO scoring system is now the most widely used approach to determine prognosis and first-line treatment intensity, historically a number of patients are treated following assessment on conventional staging (Homesley, 1994). The results in Table 5 demonstrate the disease locations for the 618 patients treated and their treatment outcome with first-line MTX/FA treatment. Of the group, only 10% had spread outside of the pelvis, with lung metastases visible on their CXRs. Of note, during routine staging and more extensive CT staging in selected patients, no cases of spread to any other sites were documented in any of these post-mole GTT patients. The first-line treatment outcome shows that the anatomical staging results parallel the FIGO system, with more advanced disease being less likely to be cured with single-agent MTX/FA. The MTX/FA success rates were 74% for those with serological disease only, 55% for those with disease limited to the uterus and only 36% for those with lung metastases. For patients who were started on MTX/FA, but developed evidence of MTX resistance, we have historically used an hCG cut-off value of 100 IU l−1 to determine with single-agent dactinomycin or a combination EMA–CO is used as the second-line treatment. In this recent study, we have used a higher cut-off value of 300 IU l−1, which has produced an overall second-line dactinomycin success rate of 94% that compares favourably with the 87% reported when the cut-off value was 100 IU l−1. With this update, we are confident that dactinomycin can be safely used in these patients with a high chance of cure and much lower toxicity than would occur with the EMA–CO treatment. Following successful therapy relapse of post-mole GTT is rare, with the data in Table 6 showing an overall relapse rate of 3.3%. The relapses were fairly evenly distributed among patients treated with MTX/FA and those receiving more complex therapies. Fortunately, all the relapse patients were cured with additional salvage chemotherapy or surgery. The low rate of relapse and high subsequent cure rate supports a policy of informing treated patients that they are almost certainly cured (97%), but that they should take part in a structured hCG follow-up programme because of the small (3%) chance of relapse. Overall, the data in this series confirms that the previously reported uniform cure rates for patients with post-molar pregnancy GTT supports the grading of treatment intensity using the FIGO scoring system, and may be of value to others treating GTT in designing clinical trials, developing centralised treatment centres or updating therapeutic guidelines.
  20 in total

1.  Treatment of low-risk gestational trophoblastic neoplasia.

Authors:  Carol Aghajanian
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2011-01-24       Impact factor: 44.544

2.  Weekly methotrexate (50mg/m(2)) without dose escalation as a primary regimen for low-risk gestational trophoblastic neoplasia.

Authors:  Woo Dae Kang; Ho Sun Choi; Seok Mo Kim
Journal:  Gynecol Oncol       Date:  2010-03-29       Impact factor: 5.482

Review 3.  Gestational trophoblastic disease.

Authors:  Michael J Seckl; Neil J Sebire; Ross S Berkowitz
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2010-07-29       Impact factor: 79.321

4.  30 years' experience in the treatment of low-risk gestational trophoblastic neoplasia in Hungary.

Authors:  Vilmos Fülöp; Ivan Szigetvári; János Szepesi; György Végh; József Bátorfi; Zoltan Nagymányoki; Miklos Török; Ross S Berkowitz
Journal:  J Reprod Med       Date:  2010 May-Jun       Impact factor: 0.142

5.  Low-risk persistent gestational trophoblastic disease: outcome after initial treatment with low-dose methotrexate and folinic acid from 1992 to 2000.

Authors:  I A McNeish; S Strickland; L Holden; G J S Rustin; M Foskett; M J Seckl; E S Newlands
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2002-04-01       Impact factor: 44.544

6.  Low-risk gestational trophoblastic neoplasia and methotrexate resistance: predictors of response to treatment with actinomycin D and need for combination chemotherapy.

Authors:  Whitfield B Growdon; Adam J Wolfberg; Donald P Goldstein; Colleen M Feltmate; Manuel E Chinchilla; Ellice S Lieberman; Ross S Berkowitz
Journal:  J Reprod Med       Date:  2010 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 0.142

7.  The management and outcome of women with post-hydatidiform mole 'low-risk' gestational trophoblastic neoplasia, but hCG levels in excess of 100 000 IU l(-1).

Authors:  S McGrath; D Short; R Harvey; P Schmid; P M Savage; M J Seckl
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2010-02-16       Impact factor: 7.640

8.  Actinomycin d versus methotrexate-folinic acid as the treatment of stage I, low-risk gestational trophoblastic neoplasia: a randomized controlled trial.

Authors:  Arb-Aroon Lertkhachonsuk; Nathpong Israngura; Sarikapan Wilailak; Somsak Tangtrakul
Journal:  Int J Gynecol Cancer       Date:  2009-07       Impact factor: 3.437

9.  Impact of the revised FIGO/WHO system on the management of patients with gestational trophoblastic neoplasia.

Authors:  L M El-Helw; R E Coleman; J E Everard; J A Tidy; J M Horsman; H F Elkhenini; B W Hancock
Journal:  Gynecol Oncol       Date:  2009-03-09       Impact factor: 5.482

Review 10.  First line chemotherapy in low risk gestational trophoblastic neoplasia.

Authors:  Mo'iad Alazzam; John Tidy; Barry W Hancock; Raymond Osborne
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2009-01-21
View more
  21 in total

1.  Gestational trophoblastic neoplasia: treatment outcomes from a single institutional experience.

Authors:  H Al-Husaini; H Soudy; A Darwish; M Ahmed; A Eltigani; W Edesa; T Elhassan; A Omar; W Elghamry; H Al-Hashem; S Al-Hayli; I Madkhali; S Ahmad; I A Al-Badawi
Journal:  Clin Transl Oncol       Date:  2014-11-15       Impact factor: 3.405

Review 2.  Gestational trophoblastic tumours: an update for 2014.

Authors:  Fieke E M Froeling; Michael J Seckl
Journal:  Curr Oncol Rep       Date:  2014-11       Impact factor: 5.075

3.  Efficacies of FAEV and EMA/CO regimens as primary treatment for gestational trophoblastic neoplasia.

Authors:  Mingliang Ji; Shiyang Jiang; Jun Zhao; Xirun Wan; Fengzhi Feng; Tong Ren; Junjun Yang; Yang Xiang
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2022-04-22       Impact factor: 9.075

Review 4.  Gestational Trophoblastic Disorders: An Update in 2015.

Authors:  F T Stevens; N Katzorke; C Tempfer; U Kreimer; G I Bizjak; M C Fleisch; T N Fehm
Journal:  Geburtshilfe Frauenheilkd       Date:  2015-10       Impact factor: 2.915

Review 5.  Treatment of gestational trophoblastic disease in the 2020s.

Authors:  James J Clark; Susanna Slater; Michael J Seckl
Journal:  Curr Opin Obstet Gynecol       Date:  2021-02-01       Impact factor: 2.211

6.  Management and prognosis of patients with brain metastasis from gestational trophoblastic neoplasia: a 24-year experience in Peking union medical college hospital.

Authors:  Changji Xiao; Junjun Yang; Jing Zhao; Tong Ren; Fengzhi Feng; Xirun Wan; Yang Xiang
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2015-04-28       Impact factor: 4.430

7.  Clinical observations on chemotherapy curable malignancies: unique genetic events, frozen development and enduring apoptotic potential.

Authors:  Philip Savage
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2015-01-21       Impact factor: 4.430

8.  Predictors of chemotherapy resistance & relapse in gestational trophoblastic neoplasia.

Authors:  Seema Singhal; Lalit Kumar; Sunesh Kumar; Sachin Khurana; Neerja Bhatla
Journal:  Indian J Med Res       Date:  2020-12       Impact factor: 2.375

9.  Early prediction of treatment resistance in low-risk gestational trophoblastic neoplasia using population kinetic modelling of hCG measurements.

Authors:  B You; R Harvey; E Henin; H Mitchell; F Golfier; P M Savage; M Tod; M Wilbaux; G Freyer; M J Seckl
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2013-04-16       Impact factor: 7.640

10.  Haemoptysis from a pulmonary arteriovenous malformation in a post molar pregnancy gestational trophoblast tumour patient managed by radiological embolisation: a case report.

Authors:  Zoë McDonald-Burrows; Rhian Davies; Elizabeth Goode; Candice Clarke; James Jackson; Michael Seckl; Philip Savage
Journal:  J Med Case Rep       Date:  2014-04-03
View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.