Abstract

BackgroundEctopic pregnancies are a leading cause of maternal mortality. Most are treated surgically. We evaluated the efficacy and safety of combining oral gefitinib (epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitor) with methotrexate to treat larger ectopic pregnancies. MethodsWe performed a phase II, single arm, open label study across four hospitals in Edinburgh and Melbourne. We recruited women with a stable tubal ectopic pregnancy and a pre-treatment serum hCG between 1000 and 10,000 IU/L. We administered intramuscular methotrexate (50 mg/m2) once, and oral gefitinib (250 mg) for seven days. The primary outcome was the percentage successfully treated without needing surgery. To show the treatment is at least 70% effective, 28 participants were required, and 24 or more successfully treated without surgery. Secondary outcomes were safety, tolerability, and time to resolution. This study is registered (ACTRN12611001056987). Findings30 participants with stable tubal ectopic pregnancies were recruited but two withdrew, leaving 28 participants. The median (± range) pre-treatment serum hCG was 2039 (1031–8575) IU/L and nine had pre-treatment hCGs levels >3000 IU/L. The treatment successfully resolved 86% (24/28) cases with a median (±range) time to resolution of 32 (18–67) days. The treatment caused transient rash and diarrhoea, but no serious adverse events. InterpretationCombination gefitinib and methotrexate is at least 70% effective in resolving ectopic pregnancies with a pre-treatment serum hCG 1000–10,000 IU/L. This may be a new way to treat most stable ectopic pregnancies, but needs to be validated via a randomised clinical trial.

Highlights

  • Ectopic pregnancy complicates 1–2% of pregnancies [1] and is the most common life-threatening condition in early pregnancy

  • We propose that the addition of oral gefitinib to the current medical management regimen of intramuscular methotrexate could provide an exciting clinical solution to the suboptimal medical therapy currently available for the management of ectopic pregnancy

  • We previously reported a Phase I (Gefitinib and Methotrexate Trial 1, or GEM1) single-arm open-label dose-escalation study administering a combination of intramuscular methotrexate (50 mg/m2, standard care) and 250 mg oral gefitinib (one dose (n = 3), three daily doses (n = 3), seven daily doses (n = 6)) to 12 women with ectopic pregnancy [5]

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Summary

Introduction

Ectopic pregnancy complicates 1–2% of pregnancies [1] and is the most common life-threatening condition in early pregnancy. We evaluated the efficacy and safety of combining oral gefitinib (epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitor) with methotrexate to treat larger ectopic pregnancies. We recruited women with a stable tubal ectopic pregnancy and a pre-treatment serum hCG between 1000 and 10,000 IU/L. The treatment successfully resolved 86% (24/28) cases with a median (± range) time to resolution of 32 (18–67) days. Interpretation: Combination gefitinib and methotrexate is at least 70% effective in resolving ectopic pregnancies with a pre-treatment serum hCG 1000–10,000 IU/L. This may be a new way to treat most stable ectopic pregnancies, but needs to be validated via a randomised clinical trial

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