Testicular Tumors Part4
Testicular Tumors Part4
Testicular Tumors Part4
Radical Orchiectomy.
• Good Risk
• Testicular or retroperitoneal primary tumor.
• No non-pulmonary visceral metastases
present
• Post orchiectomy
• AFP <1000 ng/ml and
• b-hCG <5000 IU/l and
• LDH <1.5 X upper limit of normal (ULN)
• Intermediate risk:
• Testicular or retroperitoneal primary tumor
• No non-pulmonary visceral metastases present.
• AFP1000-10000ng/ml
• b-hCG 5000-50000 IU/l
• LDH 1.5-10 XULN
Poor risk:
• Mediastinal primary site
• Non-pulmonary visceral metastases present.
• AFP >10000 ng/ml or
• b-hCG >50000 IU/l or
• LDH 10 XULN
MANAGEMENT OF SEMINOMA:
•
SPERM BANKING In patients with testicular
cancer
• Overall condition of the patient and the sperm
quality may be poor even before start of
therapy.
• It is reasonable to make every effort to bank
sperm since recent progress in assisted
reproductive techniques, particularly the
technique of intra cytoplasmic sperm injection
(ICSI) allows the successful freezing and future
use of a very limited amount of sperm
Chemotherapy regimens
• I. BEP (1st line) :Repeat cycle every 21days
Bleomycin: 30 U IV on days 2, 9
Etoposide: 100 mg/m2 IV on days 1–5
Cisplatin: 20 mg/m2 IV on days1–5
• the gonadal vessel or the adjacent tissue may harbor disease, the
ipsilateral gonadal vein and surrounding fibro adipose tissue from
its insertion to the internal ring must be completely excised to
minimize the possibility of a late paracolic recurrence.
•
Lymph Nodes Dissection For Right &
Left Sided Testicular Tumours
• It should include resection of all inter aorto-caval and
ipsilateral lymph nodes between the level of the renal
vessels and the bifurcation of the common iliac artery.
• In a nerve-sparing RPLND, both sympathetic chains,
the post ganglionic sympathetic fibers, and hypogastric
plexus are prospectively identified, dissected, and
preserved.
• With prospective nerve-sparing techniques, ante
grade ejaculation is preserved in over 95% of all
patients.
• The procedure is associated with a mortality
rate of less than 1%.
• Major complications such as
• hemorrhage,
• ureteral injury,
• bowel obstruction,
• pulmonary embolus, and
• wound dehiscence are rare.
• Minor complications include
• lymphocele,
• atelectasis,
• wound infection, and
• prolonged ileus.
What has Changed in Testicular Cancers in the
last decade
• Preferred treatment of stage 1 Seminoma is
surveillance over Chemotherapy or Radiotherapy
• Safety of MRI over CT for repeated imaging
during surveillance is under evaluation.
• miRNA biomarker has shown the potential to
predict viable germ cell tumors in residual masses
after chemotherapy in NSGCT.