Background: Despite the rising incidence of caesarean scar pregnancy (CSP), as yet there are no consensus or evidence-based guidelines for management.
Aims: To review diagnosis, treatment and management of all women with CSP over a 5 year period at Mater Mothers' Hospital, Brisbane, Australia.
Materials and methods: Retrospective cohort study of CSP between 2013-2018. Data reviewed included demographics, presenting symptoms, gestational age, ultrasound findings, human chorionic gonadotrophin levels, treatment success, complications, and if available, subsequent pregnancy outcomes.
Results: Twenty-eight women were treated for CSP during the study period. Initial diagnosis was delayed in ten (36%). Overall success rates of initial treatment were 22/28 (79%). Of the six cases of failed treatment, five had been treated with systemic methotrexate alone. All women requiring further intervention had fetal pole present, and 50% had fetal cardiac activity. Failure rate of systemic methotrexate alone was 5/11 (45%). Eleven women deemed appropriate for conservative management did not require further treatment or experience complications. Nine women had data available for subsequent pregnancies, of whom two developed placenta accreta.
Conclusion: This study provides data that may assist in guideline development and decision-making for management of CSP. Conservative management in carefully selected women appeared to be safe. Nearly half of women treated with systemic methotrexate alone required another treatment modality, suggesting a role for intralesional treatment, particularly in the presence of fetal pole ± fetal cardiac activity. More than one in five women with documented subsequent pregnancies were diagnosed with placenta accreta.
Keywords: caesarean scar pregnancy; caesarean section; ectopic; methotrexate; placenta accreta.
© 2020 The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists.