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Multidisciplinary perioperative management in dilatation and evacuation for a giant hydatidiform mole: A case report.

Gestational trophoblastic disease (GTD) is an abnormal pregnancy caused by the placenta, which can potentially metastasise. Suction evacuation is recommended for diagnosis and treatment, and dilatation and evacuation (D&E) is usually performed under intravenous anaesthesia due to the short operation time and minimal blood loss. We refer to the guidelines produced by the Japan Society of Obstetrics and Gynaecology (JSOG), and acknowledge that practices vary globally. However, to the best of our knowledge, there is no evidence on perioperative management and arrangements in D&E required for managing giant hydatidiform moles, such as preventing massive haemorrhage, respiratory dysfunction with a pathogenesis like ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS), or intensive care needs. This case report describes perioperative considerations for managing a giant hydatidiform mole using D&E in a uterus enlarged to the third-trimester pregnancy size. A 28-year-old multiparous woman was clinically diagnosed with a hydatidiform mole after a spontaneous miscarriage due to abnormal genital bleeding, systemic oedema, and abdominal distention. Ultrasound and computed tomography showed a ballooning uterus with a third-trimester pregnancy size, a robust intrauterine mass, and ascites. Serum hCG levels were extremely high (>3,000,000 mIU/mL), confirming the clinical diagnosis of a hydatidiform mole. Emergency D&E was safely performed under multidisciplinary perioperative management, with careful preparation and support. This is a rare experience-based case report and valuable documentation detailing multidisciplinary perioperative management under general anaesthesia. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report describing the considerations, details, and innovations required in the perioperative management of giant hydatidiform moles using D&E.

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