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Successful conservative management of a large 12-week-old cervical ectopic pregnancy in a nulliparous woman: a case report


John Jude Kweku Annan
Stephen Ansah-Asamoah
Benedict Apaw Agyei
Eric Lartey Quarshie
Frank Ankobea
Sylvia Vanderpuye
Collins Oteng
Sebastian Yidana Ninimiya
Nana Esi Abedua Abaidoo

Abstract

Cervical ectopic pregnancy (CEP) accounts for less than 0.1% of all ectopic pregnancies. CEP is associated with high morbidity and mortality potential due to the associated life-threatening hemorrhage. When it is large, detected late, and occurs in a nulliparous woman, management is more challenging as it requires the need to preserve the uterus. We present a case of a 33-year-old nulliparous woman with a large live cervical ectopic pregnancy at 12 weeks + 1 day gestation and a very high serum β-HCG of 126,750 Miu/ml. She was successfully managed with suction curettage and cervical encerclage tamponade in order to preserve the uterus. The treatment was associated with significant hemorrhage and a prolonged period of follow-up. In low-resource settings, uterine-conserving management of CEP can be challenging, and curettage with cervical encerclage tamponade can be a cost-effective treatment modality even though it is associated with significant haemorrhage and prolonged treatment period.


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eISSN: 1937-8688