| Literature DB >> 32391161 |
Alex R Finlinson1, Kassie J Bollig1, Danny J Schust1.
Abstract
Eccentrically located intracavitary pregnancies, which include pregnancies traditionally termed as cornual and/or angular, have long presented complex diagnostic and management challenges given their inherent relationship to interstitial ectopic pregnancies. This review uses the existing literature to discriminate among interstitial, cornual, and angular pregnancies. Current arguments propose the outright abandonment of the terms cornual and angular may be justified in favor of the singular term, eccentric pregnancy. Disparate definitions and diagnostic approaches have compromised the literature's ability to precisely describe prognosis and ideal management practices for each of these types of pregnancies. Standardizing the classification of these pregnancies near the uterotubal junction is important to unify conservative, yet safe and effective management strategies. We advocate the use of early first trimester ultrasound to correctly differentiate between eccentric pregnancy and interstitial ectopic pregnancy as current research suggests substantially better outcomes with correctly diagnosed and expectantly managed eccentric pregnancies than past investigations may have shown. The expectant management of eccentric pregnancies will often result in a healthy term pregnancy, while interstitial ectopic pregnancies inherently have a poor likelihood of progressing to viability. When the terms and diagnosis of cornual, angular, and interstitial pregnancy are indistinct, there is substantial risk of intrauterine pregnancies to be inappropriately managed as ectopic pregnancies. Until we standardize terms and criteria, it will remain difficult, if not impossible, to determine true risk for pregnancy loss, preterm labor, abnormal placentation, and uterine or uterotubal rupture. The development of best practice guidelines will require standardized terminology and diagnostic techniques.Entities:
Keywords: Angular pregnancy; Cornual pregnancy; Early pregnancy ultrasound; Eccentric pregnancy; Ectopic pregnancy; Interstitial pregnancy; Tubal pregnancy; Uterotubal junction
Year: 2020 PMID: 32391161 PMCID: PMC7199330 DOI: 10.1186/s40738-020-00077-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Fertil Res Pract ISSN: 2054-7099
Image 1Eccentric pregnancy in a partially septate uterus, which previous literature referenced as a “cornual pregnancy”
Common definitions of pregnancy near the uterotubal junction in the literature
Pregnancy outside the endometrial cavity | |
- Pregnancy that implants within the proximal tubal segment that lies within the muscular uterine wall [ - Implantation within the most medial 1–2 cm of a fallopian tube as it opens into a uterine cavity without evidence of uterine anomaly [ | |
Pregnancy implantation within the superior-lateral aspect of the endometrial cavity/uterine corpus | |
- Implantation within the endometrial cavity, but at one cornua and medial to the uterotubal junction and round ligament [ - Angular pregnancy that displaces the round ligament upward and outward, whereas interstitial tubal pregnancy will not [ - Lateral displacement of pregnancy by a uterine leiomyoma or other myometrial mass [ | |
- Conception that develops in the rudimentary horn of a uterus with a mullerian anomaly [ |
Sonographic criteria for eccentric pregnancy
Sonographic criteria for interstitial pregnancy