Unintentional exposure to leuprolide acetate during early pregnancy with a huge intramural myoma
- PMID: 39753288
- DOI: 10.1136/bcr-2024-262211
Unintentional exposure to leuprolide acetate during early pregnancy with a huge intramural myoma
Abstract
Leuprolide acetate is commonly used to reduce the size of myomas before surgery. Initially, it stimulates pituitary gonadotropin secretion, followed by sustained suppression of gonadal function. However, the impact on pregnancy outcomes from inadvertent exposure remains unclear. This case involves a woman in her 30s, multiparous, with a 20-week-sized leiomyoma, who received two doses of 3.75 mg subcutaneous leuprolide acetate, 15 days after menstruation, 4 weeks apart. An ultrasound, conducted 2 weeks after the last dose, accidentally revealed a viable intrauterine pregnancy at 8+6 weeks gestation. Her pregnancy progressed without complications, culminating in a term caesarean delivery without fetal anomalies. She opted for a total hysterectomy with bilateral salpingectomy 6 months later. Despite unclear teratogenic effects, evidence suggests that leuprolide acetate does not significantly impact pregnancy outcomes.
Keywords: Abortion; Drugs: obstetrics and gynaecology; Obstetrics and gynaecology; Pregnancy.
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Conflict of interest statement
Competing interests: None declared.
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