Ectopic pregnancy: Difference between revisions

m (Rossdonaldson1 moved page Ectopic Pregnancy to Ectopic pregnancy)
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##Vaginal bleeding
##Vaginal bleeding


===Algorithm===
==Ectopic Workup Algorithm==
#[[Pelvic US]]^
{| class="wikitable"
##IUP^^
|+'''Estimating the Risk for Ectopic Pregnancy<ref>Buckley RG, King K et. al. History and physical examination to estimate the risk of ectopic pregnancy: validation of a clinical prediction model. Ann Emerg Med. 1999;34:589–94</ref>'''
###No IVF/fertility medications
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Clinical Signs and Symptoms'''
####Ectopic ruled out
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Risk Group'''
###IVF/fertility medications
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Percent Risk of Ectopic (%)'''
####Consider heterotopic
|-
#####No rebound/shock
| Peritoneal irritation or cervical motion tenderness||High||29
######Repeat B-HCG in 48hrs (see Repeat B-hCG Levels)
|-
#####Rebound and/or shock
| No fetal heart tones; no tissue at cervical os; pain present||Intermediate||7
######OB/GYN consult
|-
##Indeterminate (Pregnancy of Unknown Location)
| Fetal heart tones or tissue at cervical os; no pain||||<1
###B-HCG below Discriminatory Zone (<1,500-3,000 mIU/ml)
|}
####No rebound/shock
===Step one===
#####Repeat B-HCG in 48hrs (see Repeat B-hCG Levels)
*Assess for [[Shock]]
####Rebound and/or shock
*If patient is a high risk for ectopic based on above estimation then immediately contact OBGYN
#####OB/GYN consult
###B-HCG above Discriminatory Zone (>1,500-3,000 mIU/ml)
####Ectopic pregnancy until proven otherwise
#####OB/GYN consult
##+Ectopic
###See treatment


*^Consider Transabd US for IUP: >6000 mIU/ml (but if negative or indeterminate must do Pelvic US)
===Step Two===
*^^Gestational sac alone does NOT equal IUP (must also have yolk sac)
'''Perform a [[Pelvic US]]'''
*Consider Transabdominal Ultrasound  for B-HCG: >6000 mIU/ml (but if negative or indeterminate must do Pelvic US regardless of B-HCG)
'''Is there an Intrauterine Pregnancy?'''
*If there is an IUP and there was no assisted reproductive fertility used then ectopic ruled out and heterotopic unlikely (less than 1:30,000)<ref>Mukul LV, Teal SB. Current management of ectopic pregnancy. Obstet Gynecol Clin N Am. 2007; 34:403-419. </ref>
*If fertility assistance was used then still consider a heterotopic (1% risk)<ref>Yeh HC, Goodman JD, Carr L, et al. Intradecidual sign: a US criterion of early intrauterine pregnancy. Radiology. 1986;161:463-467</ref>
 
===Step Three===
* If HCG above Discriminatory Zone (>1,500-3,000 mIU/ml) and not visualized it should be an ectopic pregnancy until proven otherwise
 
===Step Four===
*Arrange close followup for patients with no visualized IUP and B-HCG( (<1,500-3,000 mIU/ml), with minimal to no pain and hemodynamically stable.
*Patients should have a 48hr repeat B-HCG level checked to determine if appropriate doubling is occurring.


===Repeat B-hCG Levels===
===Repeat B-hCG Levels===

Revision as of 19:36, 23 September 2014

Background

  • Must consider in all women of childbearing age who p/w abd/pelvic pain + hypovolemia
  • Leading cause of maternal death in first trimester
  • Pregnancy in patient with prior tubal ligation or IUD in place is ectopic until proven otherwise (25-50% are ectopic)
  • Heterotopic risk
    • General Population = 1 per 4000
    • IVF Population = 1 per 100

Risk Factors^

  1. Major
    1. H/O PID
    2. History of tubal surgery or IUD in place
    3. Previous ectopic
  2. Minor
    1. Tobacco
    2. Assisted reproduction techniques
    3. Age >35
    4. Numerous lifetime partners

^Only 50% of ectopics have a risk factor

Work-Up

  1. Hb (or CBC)
  2. Beta-HCG (quantitative)
  3. T&S (or Rh Factor)
  4. FAST and Pelvic US
  5. UA?

Diagnosis

Clinical Features

  1. Ruptured
    1. Shock
    2. Rebound tenderness
  2. Non-ruptured (early)
    1. Abdominal/pelvic pain
    2. Vaginal bleeding

Ectopic Workup Algorithm

Estimating the Risk for Ectopic Pregnancy[1]
Clinical Signs and Symptoms Risk Group Percent Risk of Ectopic (%)
Peritoneal irritation or cervical motion tenderness High 29
No fetal heart tones; no tissue at cervical os; pain present Intermediate 7
Fetal heart tones or tissue at cervical os; no pain <1

Step one

  • Assess for Shock
  • If patient is a high risk for ectopic based on above estimation then immediately contact OBGYN

Step Two

Perform a Pelvic US

  • Consider Transabdominal Ultrasound for B-HCG: >6000 mIU/ml (but if negative or indeterminate must do Pelvic US regardless of B-HCG)

Is there an Intrauterine Pregnancy?

  • If there is an IUP and there was no assisted reproductive fertility used then ectopic ruled out and heterotopic unlikely (less than 1:30,000)[2]
  • If fertility assistance was used then still consider a heterotopic (1% risk)[3]

Step Three

  • If HCG above Discriminatory Zone (>1,500-3,000 mIU/ml) and not visualized it should be an ectopic pregnancy until proven otherwise

Step Four

  • Arrange close followup for patients with no visualized IUP and B-HCG( (<1,500-3,000 mIU/ml), with minimal to no pain and hemodynamically stable.
  • Patients should have a 48hr repeat B-HCG level checked to determine if appropriate doubling is occurring.

Repeat B-hCG Levels

  • Normal pregnancy
    • B-hCG should increase >53% in 48hrs (until 10,000 mIU/ml)
  • Ectopic pregnancy
    • B-hCG increases or decreases slowly ("plateau")^
  • Miscarriage
    • B-hCG decreases >20% in 48 hrs

^Initial level CANNOT be used to rule-out ectopic

DDX

  1. All Patients
    1. Appendicitis
    2. IBD
    3. Ovarian Cyst
    4. Ovarian Torsion
    5. PID
    6. Endometriosis
    7. Sexual assault/trauma
    8. Urinary Tract Infection
    9. Ureteral Colic
  2. Pregnant Patients
    1. Normal (intrauterine pregnancy)
    2. Threatened abortion
    3. Inevitable abortion
    4. Molar pregnancy
    5. Heterotopic pregnancy
    6. Implantation bleeding
    7. Corpus luteum cyst

Treatment

  1. RhoGAM for all Rh- pts
  2. OB/GYN Consult
  3. Medical management with methotrexate (ACOG)
    1. Absolute contraindications
      1. Breast-feeding
      2. laboratory evidence of immunodeficiency
      3. preexisting blood dyscrasias (bone marrow hypoplasia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, or clinically significant anemia)
      4. known sensitivity to methotrexate
      5. active pulmonary disease; peptic ulcer disease
      6. hepatic, renal, or hematologic dysfunction
      7. alcoholism
      8. alcoholic or other chronic liver disease
    2. Relative contraindications
      1. Ectopic mass >3.5 cm
      2. Embryonic cardiac motion
    3. Regimen choice
      1. hCG value <5000 mIU/ml --> single dose
      2. hCG value >5000 mIU/ml --> multi dose
  4. OR, Surgery
    1. Salpingectomy vs. salpingostomy

External Links

Source

  • Tintinalli
  • Barnhart KT. Ectopic Pregnancy [clinical practice]. N Engl J Med. 2009;361(4):379-387.
  1. Buckley RG, King K et. al. History and physical examination to estimate the risk of ectopic pregnancy: validation of a clinical prediction model. Ann Emerg Med. 1999;34:589–94
  2. Mukul LV, Teal SB. Current management of ectopic pregnancy. Obstet Gynecol Clin N Am. 2007; 34:403-419.
  3. Yeh HC, Goodman JD, Carr L, et al. Intradecidual sign: a US criterion of early intrauterine pregnancy. Radiology. 1986;161:463-467