| Literature DB >> 33123396 |
Ekaterina Baron1, Vadim Gushchin1, Mary Caitlin King1, Andrei Nikiforchin1, Armando Sardi1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinical decisions in patients with peritoneal dissemination of low-grade appendiceal mucinous neoplasms (LAMN) diagnosed during pregnancy are challenging. However, their slow progression and favorable prognosis allow deferring definitive treatment until after spontaneous delivery, a reasonable period of breastfeeding, and fertility preservation. Case Presentation. Two pregnant patients were incidentally diagnosed with LAMN and extensive peritoneal spread at 20 weeks gestation and at cesarean section. Treatment with cytoreductive surgery and hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy in both cases was delayed until spontaneous delivery at term and breastfeeding in the first patient and breastfeeding and fertility preservation in the second patient. Both patients remain disease-free for over 5 years, and their children are healthy. The literature review highlights the challenges that physicians face in treating pregnant patients with stage IV appendiceal tumors.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33123396 PMCID: PMC7584972 DOI: 10.1155/2020/8853704
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Oncol Med
Figure 1(a) Abdominal and pelvic MRI (sagittal plane) without IV contrast shows a gravid uterus and a substantial amount of T2 hyperintense fluid. (b) Abdominal and pelvic MRI (coronal plane) without IV contrast demonstrates an enlarged perforated appendix with extraluminal mucin (arrow) and T2 hyperintense fluid collection in the pelvis. B: bladder; C: cervix; F: fetus; IV: intravenous; MA: mucinous ascites; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging; U: uterus.
Figure 2(a), (b) Abdominal and pelvic MRI without IV contrast ((a) coronal plane, (b) axial plane) shows a gravid uterus and significant amount of T2 hyperintense fluid, some of which is loculated with internal septations (arrows). B: bladder; F: fetus; IV: intravenous; MA: mucinous ascites; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging; P: placenta; U: uterus.
Literature review of appendiceal tumors diagnosed during pregnancy.
| # | Author (year) | Age | Pathology | PC | Gestational age at dx | Clinical presentation | Treatment during pregnancy | Pregnancy outcome | Staging | Treatment postpregnancy | Time from pregnancy end to treatment | PCI | CC score | Complications | Breast-feeding | Status | Child |
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| 6 | Donnenfeld et al. (1986) [ | 25 | Perforated invasive grade 1 mucinous adenocarcinoma | No | 3rd Tx (31 weeks) | Acute appendicitis with peritonitis | Urgent open appy, abscess drain | Induced vaginal delivery (33 weeks) | Chest X-ray, CT abd, colonoscopy 3 days after delivery | R hemicolectomy | 9 days | NA | NA | None | - | 30 days | Healthy |
| 7 | Morgan et al. (2004) [ | 30 | Well-differentiated mucinous adenocarcinoma, negative peritoneal washings | No | 2nd Tx (26 weeks) | Acute abdomen | Urgent open R hemicolectomy | Spontaneous vaginal delivery (at term) | - | None | NA | NA | NA | None | - | 36 mos, NED | - |
| 8 | Zeteroğlu et al. (2003) [ | 35 | Non-perforated mucinous appendiceal cyctadenocarcinoma | No | 2nd Tx (21 weeks) | Symptoms of acute appendicitis | Urgent appy | Terminated with misoprostol (21 weeks) | - | R hemicolectomy, omentectomy | 3 days | NA | NA | None | NA | 1 yr, NED | NA |
| 9 | Casey et al. (2003) [ | 36 | Perforated appendiceal mucious cystadenoma | No | 2nd Tx (21 weeks) | Symptoms of acute appendicitis | Open appy | - | - | None | NA | NA | NA | - | - | - | - |
| 10 | Kalu and Croucher (2004) [ | 42 | Mucus adenoma with mucocele | No | 1st Tx (5 weeks) | US due to vaginal bleeding | None | Spontaneous miscarriage (anembryonic pregnancy) (7 weeks) | US at 5 weeks (adnexal mass); US in 3 Mos (enlarging ovarian mass) | Laparotomy/appy | 3 mos | NA | NA | None | NA | - | NA |
| 11 | Idris et al. (2015) [ | 35 | Mucocele | No | 2nd Tx (22 weeks) | Symptoms of acute appendicitis | Open appy | Spontaneous vaginal delivery (at term) | - | None | NA | NA | NA | None | - | 1 yr, NED | - |
| 12 | Gilboa et al. (2008) [ | 31 | Carcinoid tumor | No | 1st Tx (9 weeks) | Symptoms of acute appendicitis | Appy | Spontaneous miscarriage (5 days post-op) | - | - | - | NA | NA | - | - | - | NA |
| 13 | Louzi et al.§ (2006) [ | 36 | Well-differentiated carcinoid tumor | No | 3rd Tx (34 weeks) | Symptoms of acute appendicitis | Urgent appy | Vaginal delivery (35 weeks) | - | R hemicolectomy | 2 weeks | NA | NA | - | - | 23 mos, NED | Healthy |
| 14 | Piatek et al. (2016) [ | 28 | Well-differentiated carcinoid with gangrenous appendicitis (KI-67: <1%) | No | 2nd Tx (25 weeks) | Symptoms of acute appendicitis | Appy | Spontaneous vaginal delivery (38 weeks) | MRI abd at 29 weeks, normal 24-hour urine 5-HIAA; whole body SPECT 3 Mos after delivery | None | NA | NA | NA | None | - | 1 yr, NED | Healthy |
| 15 | Berrios (1965) [ | 23 | Carcinoid tumor | No | 1st Tx (2 months) | Symptoms of acute appendicitis | Appy | Spontaneous vaginal delivery (at term) | Negative liver scan during pregnancy | None | NA | NA | NA | - | - | 23 mos, NED | Healthy |
| 16 | Berrios (1965) [ | 26 | Carcinoid tumor | No | 1st Tx (10 weeks) | Symptoms of ruptured ectopic pregnancy | Bleeding luteum cyst, incidental appy | - | - | None | NA | NA | NA | - | - | No FU | - |
| 17 | Pitiakoudis et al. (2008) [ | 24 | Carcinoid tumor (0.5 cm) | No | 3rd Tx (32 weeks) | Symptoms of acute appendicitis | Appy | Spontaneous vagina delivery (39 weeks) | - | - | - | NA | NA | None | - | - | Healthy |
| 18 | Korkontzelos (2005) [ | 23 | Carcinoid tumor (2.2 cm) | No | 2nd Tx (16 weeks) | Symptoms of acute appendicitis | Urgent appy | C-section (36 weeks) | - | R hemicolectomy | 0 days (at C-section) | NA | NA | - | - | - | Healthy |
§Article in French. The cases reporting peritoneal spread at presentation are in italics. 5-FU: 5-fluorouracil; 5-HIAA: 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid; Abd: abdomen; Appy: appendectomy; AWD: alive with disease; Bx: biopsy; CC: completeness of cytoreduction; CRS/HIPEC: cytoreductive surgery with hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy; C-section: cesarean section; CT: computed tomography; DVT: deep vein thrombosis; Dx: diagnosis/diagnostic; FOLFOX: folinic acid+5-fluorouracil+oxaliplatin; IVF: in vitro fertilization; LAMN: low-grade appendiceal mucinous neoplasm; Lap: laparoscopy; Mit-C: mitomycin C; mos: months; NA: not applicable; NED: no evidence of disease; NGT: nasogastric tube; PC: peritoneal carcinomatosis; PCI: peritoneal cancer index; Pelv: pelvis; R: right; RDS: respiratory distress syndrome; SPECT: single-photon emission computed tomography; TPN: total parenteral nutrition; Tx: trimester; US: ultrasound; UTI: urinary tract infection; XELOX: capecitabine+oxaliplatin; Yr (s): year (s).
Literature review of appendiceal tumors diagnosed during cesarean section.
| # | Author (year) | Age | Pathology | PC | Gestational age at dx | Clinical findings during pregnancy | HIPEC referral | C-section surgery | C-section indication | Staging | Postpartum treatment | PCI | CC score | Complications | Breast-feeding | Status | Child |
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| 4 | Inubashiri et al. (2019) [ | 24 | LAMN | No | 38 weeks | Uneventful | NA | Appy | Cephalopelvic disproportion | CT scan 1 month after C-section | None | NA | NA | None | - | 6 days | Healthy |
| 5 | Yohannes et al. (2019) [ | 31 | LAMN | No | 38 weeks | Uneventful | NA | Appy | Fetal hypoxia, dysfunctional 2nd stage of labor | CT abd/pelv after C-section | None | NA | NA | - | - | LTFU | Healthy |
| 6 | Gallo et al. (2001) [ | 29 | Well-differentiated mucinous cystadenocarcinoma | No | 38 weeks | Uneventful | NA | Appy | Dysfunctional spontaneous delivery | Postpartum barium enema, abdominal scan, chest X-ray | R hemicolectomy | NA | NA | - | - | 5 yrs, NED | Healthy |
| 7 | Berrios (1965) [ | 21 | Carcinoid tumor | No | At term | Uneventful | NA | Appy | Cephalopelvic disproportion | - | - | NA | NA | - | - | - | Healthy |
| 8 | Berrios et al. (1965) [ | 30 | Carcinoid tumor | No | 38 weeks | - | NA | Appy | - | - | - | NA | NA | - | - | No FU | - |
| 9 | Gökaslan et al. (2001) [ | 30 | Carcinoid tumor | No | - | - | NA | Appy | - | None | None | NA | NA | - | - | 5 mos, NED | Healthy |
The cases reporting peritoneal spread at presentation are in italics. Abd: abdomen; Appy: appendectomy; CC: completeness of cytoreduction; CRS/HIPEC: cytoreductive surgery with hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy; C-section: cesarean section; CT: computed tomography; Dx: diagnosis; FU: follow-up; LAMN: low-grade appendiceal mucinous neoplasm; LTFU: lost to follow-up; Mit-C: mitomycin C; mos: months; NA: not applicable; NED: no evidence of disease; PC: peritoneal carcinomatosis; PCI: peritoneal cancer index; Pelv: pelvis; Yrs: years.
Figure 3Algorithm of appendiceal mucinous neoplasm management diagnosed during pregnancy. §The algorithm here is consistent with that for the first two scenarios except pregnancy management. AMN: mucinous appendiceal neoplasm; CRS/HIPEC: cytoreductive surgery with hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy; C-section: cesarean section; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging; PC: peritoneal carcinomatosis; US: ultrasound.