Treatment options for invasive mole and choriocarcinoma

Your healthcare team decide which treatment you need for an invasive mole or choriocarcinoma. This depends on:

  • how far your disease has grown or spread (the stage)
  • your risk score
  • your symptoms

Your healthcare team

Usually a team of doctors and other health professionals work together. They consider your case and decide together on the best treatment for you. They specialise in different aspects of treatment, but work together as a multi disciplinary team (MDT).

The team may include:

  • cancer specialists who treat cancer with cancer drugs (medical oncologist)

  • a GTD specialist nurse (clinical nurse specialist)

  • a pathologist who examines any cancer or molar tissue

  • physiotherapists

  • a radiologist who looks at your scans and x-rays

  • psychologists and counsellors

Treatment overview

Most people with an invasive mole or choriocarcinoma will have chemotherapy treatment. A few women might need surgery.

Chemotherapy and cancer drug treatments

Chemotherapy uses anti cancer drugs to destroy cancer cells. The drugs circulate throughout the body in the bloodstream.

Immunotherapy drugs help your immune system attack cancer. Although rare, some women’s disease might develop resistance to chemotherapy. So they have treatment with immunotherapy drugs.

The type of cancer drug treatment you need will depend on your stage and risk score. 

Surgery

Your doctor might suggest surgery to remove the womb. This is called a hysterectomy. You might have this if your cancer doesn't respond to chemotherapy. Or if you have completed your family and do not want to have chemotherapy. 

You might still need to have chemotherapy after a hysterectomy. Your specialist team will discuss this with you.

In very rare situations, women might have surgery to remove disease that has spread to other parts of the body.

Where you have treatment

To have treatment you go to one of the UK specialist centres:

  • Charing Cross Hospital, London

  • Weston Park Hospital, Sheffield

The amount of time you need to spend in hospital depends on the treatment you have. You are likely to need to stay in hospital for at least a week at the start of treatment.

The overall course of treatment Open a glossary item for chemotherapy can last up to 6 months. You may be able to have much of the treatment as an outpatient at your local hospital.

Follow up

Following treatment, your healthcare team will monitor you closely. You have regular blood and urine tests to check your levels of hCG hormone. This is to:

  • check that the disease has completely gone and
  • look for any signs of it coming back

Cancer Research UK nurses

For support and information, you can call the Cancer Research UK information nurses. They can give advice about who can help you and what kind of support is available. Freephone: 0808 800 4040 - Monday to Friday, 9am to 5pm.
  • Diagnosis and management of gestational trophoblastic disease: 2025 update

    Hextan Y. S. Ngan and others 

    The International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics. 2025

  • The Management of Gestational Trophoblastic Disease (4th edition)
    Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, September 2020

  • Gestational Trophoblastic Disease (5th Edition)
    International Society for the Study of Trophoblastic Diseases, 2022

  • Treatment of Gestational Trophoblastic Disease in the 2020s
    J Clark and others
    Current Opinions in Obstetrics and Gynecology, 2021. Volume 33. Pages 7-12

Last reviewed: 
05 Sep 2025
Next review due: 
15 Sep 2028

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