Abstract

To determine whether completion rates of salpingostomy for tubal ectopic pregnancy are compromised by initial medical management with methotrexate (MTX). Retrospective cohort study. Single academic hospital system. Patients requiring surgery for ectopic pregnancy between 2006 and 2017. A subset of patients who went directly to surgery, and all patients who failed MTX before requiring surgery underwent detailed chart review. Salpingostomy plan and success rate and salpingostomy failure reasons were compared between patients pretreated with MTX and those who were MTX-untreated. Among 94 ectopic pregnancies requiring surgery after failed MTX treatment, 55 (59%) underwent planned salpingostomy. From 693 ectopic pregnancies managed without MTX, 166 were analyzed in detail, of which 80 (48%) underwent planned salpingostomy. The patients who underwent planned salpingostomy were thinner (body mass index 27.3 ± 7.2 kg/m2 vs 29.3 ± 8.3 kg/m2; p = .048), less frequently African American (33% vs 47%; p = .017), and more likely to have a visualized adnexal lesion (70% vs 52%; p = .004) than those undergoing planned salpingectomy. Preoperative ultrasound identified fetal cardiac activity and hemoperitoneum at comparable rates. MTX exposure was not associated with age, body mass index, race, ectopic risk factors, human chorionic gonadotropin levels, or gestational age at diagnosis, but the patients treated with MTX underwent surgery later than those who were untreated (gestational age 53.4 ± 11.2 days vs 43.5 ± 11 days; p <.001). The differences between the adnexal lesion size and rates of fetal cardiac activity and hemoperitoneum on ultrasound related to MTX exposure did not meet significance. Planned salpingostomy was completed in 22 (40%) of the patients treated with MTX vs 34 (42%) of those who were untreated. The reasons for failure, surgery time, and rates of hemoperitoneum or ectopic rupture were not associated with MTX exposure. Body mass index, race, tubal anastomosis history, visualization of the adnexal lesion, and MTX exposure were not significantly associated with the salpingostomy rate in a multivariate logistic regression model, but having a subspecialist surgeon (odds ratio 2.70; 95% confidence interval, 1.08-6.76; p = .033) and tubal rupture at surgery (odds ratio 0.23; 95% confidence interval, 0.09-0.54; p = .001) were. The initial medical management of an ectopic pregnancy with MTX is not associated with a decreased salpingostomy success rate.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call