Five-Year Survival 100 percent for both invasive mole and non-metastatic choriocarcinoma Low-Risk Metastatic GTD Metastatic choriocarcinoma is considered low-risk when it is diagnosed less than four months after the onset of the pregnancy, when the ,BHCG titer is less than 40,000 mIU/mL, when there are no liver or brain metastases and when there has been no previous treatment with chemotherapy . Standard Treatment Therapy for women with low-risk metastatic GTD is usually with a single chemotherapeutic drug as for non-metastatic disease. Many physicians use only single-agent chemotherapy for women who have an abnormal postmolar ßHCG titer. All other cases with good prognostic features are treated with a combination of methotrexate + actinomycin-D + cyclophosphamide (MAC). Those who fail chemotherapy with methotrexate alone (approximately 20 percent) are then treated with actinomycin-D or with MAC. MAC or EMA-CO is given intravenously for five consecutive days every two to three weeks until the ßHCG titer returns to normal. EMA-CO includes the drugs etoposide , methotrexate, actinomycin-D, vincristine and cyclophosphamide. Five-Year Survival 97 to 100 percent