The case reports of 22 patients with cervical pregnancies treated by methotrexate (MTX) administration and published in English literature between 1983 and 1995 were reviewed, by either original paper review or follow-up under international collaboration, to determine the subsequent reproductive performance and obstetric outcomes. Out of 22 cases, 18 (78%) MTX chemotherapy attempts succeeded with complete remission and four (22%) failed. Of the 13 women who wished to conceive and could be followed for at least 3 years, nine succeeded in having live births without congenital malformations, one spontaneously aborted and three suffered infertility. In general, MTX chemotherapy alone or combined with adjuvant methods such as subsequent cervical curettage or cervical tamponade, or intracervical potassium chloride injection, appears to be a convenient and effective method for the treatment of the majority of cervical pregnancies before 12 weeks gestation, and has not been shown to have detrimental effects on subsequent reproductive capacities, obstetric outcomes and progeny health for those cases with successful preservation of the uteri.
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