Abstract

ObjetivesMelanoma is one of the most frequent malignancies during gestation. However, oncological and perinatal management is still challenging. Our first objective is to describe the cases of pregnancy-associated melanoma (PAM) diagnosed in our centre between January-2004 and May-2015. Secondly, to perform a systematic review of the published articles analysing the maternal-perinatal outcomes of patients diagnosed with PAM. Design, population and methodsObstetrical, oncological and perinatal variables were recorded in the case series. For the systematic review we include all published articles assessing the obstetric and neonatal outcomes in PAM cases in Pubmed, Web of Knowledge and Cochrane Library. The search was restricted to articles published in English, between January-2004 and May-2015. Study characteristics, oncological and maternal-perinatal variables were recorded in the systematic review. ResultsTwo patients were found: the first case presents a newly diagnosed metastatic melanoma at 26-weeks of gestation with fatal maternal and neonatal outcome. The second case presents a patient with metastatic melanoma who got pregnant during her treatment. For the systematic review we found 25 articles, providing data from 489 patients. Maternal-perinatal outcomes, including termination of pregnancy rates, vary depending on the country, gestational age and tumour stage at diagnosis. PAM is usually detected at advanced stages, even with metastasis affecting the placenta and the foetus. ConclusionsWhen diagnosed at early stages, melanoma does not seem to alter the evolution of gestation, whereas patients with advanced stages of melanoma frequently deliver prematurely, by caesarean section, with lower neonatal weight, higher neonatal morbidity and mortality rates.

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