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Interesting case

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also increase with smoking. beta-human chorionic gonadotropin ( -hCG) ... CT scanning shows a large 25-cm retroperitoneal lesion encompassing the aorta ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Interesting case


1
Interesting case
  • Presented by
  • Kosin Wirasorn,MD.

2
Case ????????? ???? 37 ?? ????? ????
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    ????????????????????? 10 ??. ?????????????????????
    ????? ????????????????????? ??????????????????????
    ? ????????????????????????????????????????????????
    ??????????????

3
Past history
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  • 3 ????????????????? ??????????????????????????????
    ?????? ?????????????????????????
    ??????????????????? ??? ????????? ?????????
    ???????
  • 2 ????????????????? ????????????? ???
    ???????????????????? ???????????????????????????
    ??? ?????????? ?????????????????????? admit
    ??.????????? ??? Rt. radical orchidectomy
    pathologic report seminoma ??????????????????

4
Past and personal history
  • ?????? DM and HT
  • No family of malignancy
  • Smoking 1 pack-year
  • Alcohol drinking

5
Physical examination
  • Impalpable cervical and supraclavicular lymph
    nodes
  • Rt. Lower abdominal bulging and mass size 10 x 10
    cms, firm consistency, smooth surface not tender
  • Palpable bilateral groin nodes
  • Swelling and pitting edema both legs

6
Problem lists
  • Pelvic mass
  • DVT
  • History Cryptorchidiasm

7
Male pelvic anatomy
8
PELVIC MASS
Skeletal muscle
Bladder
GI
Lymph node
Ureters
Bone
- 1 lymphoma - Metastatic Lymph node
- CA colon - CA rectum
- CA Bladder
9
Paraaortic lymph node
receive drainage from the lower gastrointestinal
tract and the pelvic organs
10
History of undescented testis
11
Causes Cryptorchidiasm
  • ? risk of testis cancer 10 40x
  • 10 GCTs have a history of cryptorchidism
  • Risk is greater for the abdominal VS inguinal
    undescended testis.
  • Abdominal testis is more likely to be seminoma
  • Testis surgically brought to the scrotum by
    orchiopexy is more likely to be NSGCT

12
CBC
  • Hb 8.3, Hct 27
  • WBC 9,780 cells/mm3
  • PMN 79 Lympho 13.5 Mono 4.7 Eos 2.6 Baso 0.2
  • Plt 338,000 /mm3
  • MCV 62, RDW 26

13
Blood chem and LFT
  • BUN/Cr 18.4 /1.3 mg/dL
  • Cholesterol 179
  • Albumin 2.2 Globulin 5.5
  • TB 0.6 DB 0.2
  • ALT 27 AST 60
  • ALP 240 GGT 154

14
Tumor marker
  • Beta hCG 4.73
  • AFP 1.16
  • PSA 0.083

15
Other
  • D dimer 1.331
  • Hepatitis profile negative

16
Progression
  • Plain KUB Rt. renal calculi with hydronephrosis
  • CT whole abdomen enlarge paraaotic lymp node
    with compression to IVC and Rt. renal vein
  • Groin node biopsy reactive hyperplasia

17
Testicular GCTs
  • seminoma (40)
  • embryonal (25)
  • teratocarcinoma (25)
  • teratoma (5)
  • choriocarcinoma (pure) (1)

18
Germ cell carcinoma in situ (CIS)
  • premalignant of seminoma or embryonal cancer.
  • infertility, intersex disorders, cryptorchidism,
    prior contralateral GCTs, or atrophic testes more
    commonly have CIS
  • testicular microcalcifications observed on
    scrotal ultrasonographic studies may suggest CIS.

19
History
  • Common presentation
  • male aged 15-35 years
  • chronic painless testicle lump
  • semen analysis may be subfertile
  • hydrocele, and scrotal ultrasonography may
    identify a nonpalpable testis tumor
  • The testicular lump, nodule, or mass

20
Delay in diagnosis
  • patient's failure to perform self-examinations,
  • patient's failure to alert the physician about
    the mass, or
  • delay treating for presumed epididymoorchitis or
    testicular trauma

21
Testicular Seminoma
  • 75 are localized (stage I) at diagnosis
  • 15 metastatic to regional lymph nodes
  • 5-10 juxtaregional nodes or visceral metastases

Testicular Seminoma
22
Uncommon presentation
  • Acute testicular pain, associated with hydrocele
  • Testis tumor metastatic and manifest with large
    retroperitoneal and/or chest lesions
  • Burned-out testis cancer
  • Series of patients with previous nonpalpable
    testes that were incorrectly diagnosed as
    vanished testes. A subsequent seminoma was
    diagnosed intra-abdominally
  • Miller et al, 1996.

23
Causes
  • Orchiopexy
  • earlier detection by physical examination
  • but not alter the risk of GCT.
  • Genetic 12p11.2-p12.1
  • 12p invasive growth of both seminomas and
    NSGCTs
  • chromosome 9 spermatocytic seminoma
  • infantile yolk sac tumors and teratomas no
    chromosomal changes
  • Other risks include trauma, mumps, and maternal
    estrogen exposure

24
Lab Studies
  • Yolk sac elements secrete AFP Nonseminoma
  • Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH)
  • less-specific marker for GCTs
  • but levels can correlate with overall tumor
    burden.
  • Placentalike alkaline phosphatase
  • elevated in seminoma, especially tumor burden
    increases
  • also increase with smoking

25
beta-human chorionic gonadotropin (ß-hCG)
  • glycoprotein with the same a-unit as TSH, FH, and
    LH.
  • 24-hour half-life
  • secreted by syncytiotrophoblast cells within
    GCTs.
  • 5-10 seminomas, its elevation may correlate with
    metastatic disease
  • If bHCG levels do not normalize after
    orchiectomy, suggests treat as NSGCT

26
Imaging Studies
  • Scrotal ultrasonography
  • consider for any male with a suspicious or
    questionable testicular mass
  • acute scrotal pain (especially when associated
    with a hydrocele), nonspecific scrotal pain,
    swelling, or the presence of a mass
  • asymptomatic hydrocele obscures physical
    examination of the testicleScrotal
    ultrasonography commonly shows a homogeneous
    hypoechoic intratesticular mass. Larger lesions
    may be more inhomogeneous.
  • calcifications and cystic less common in
    seminomas than in nonseminomatous tumors

27
Scrotal ultrasonography
  • Testicular seminoma.
  • This scrotal ultrasound of a 37-year-old man with
    a painless mass in his right testis shows a right
    testis with hypoechoic solid masses compared to
    the homogeneous, more hyperechoic, healthy left
    testis.

28
Imaging Studies
  • CT scanning of the abdomen and pelvis with IV and
    oral contrast identify metastatic disease to
    the retroperitoneal lymph nodes
  • Chest CT scanning indicated only when abnormal
    findings are observed on a chest radiograph

29
CT scanning of the abdomen
  • Testicular seminoma.
  • A 57-year-old man presents with abdominal pain
    of slow onset.
  • CT scanning shows a large 25-cm retroperitoneal
    lesion encompassing the aorta and renal
    vasculature and displacing the right kidney
    laterally.
  • history of cryptorchidism repaired at age 8
    years.

30
Histologic Findings
  • Classic seminoma
  • Anaplastic seminoma
  • Spermatocytic seminoma

Classic seminoma
31
External beam radiation therapy for stage I and
nonbulky stage II disease
  • 2500 cGy hockey-stick field( the para-aortic,
    paracaval, bilateral common iliac, and external
    iliac nodal regions)
  • Recent protocols are reducing the radiation field
    to the para-aortic area only.
  • A compared adjuvant radiotherapy at 30 Gy versus
    20 Gy for stage I seminoma. The lower dose had
    equivalent associated relapse rates and reduced
    morbidity, especially regarding fatigue.

Medical Research Council,2005
32
External beam radiation therapy for stage I and
nonbulky stage II disease
  • 3 relapse after radiation therapy
  • Short-term adverse effects fatigue, nausea,
    vomiting, and GI upset.
  • Secondary malignancies are rarely reported

33
External beam radiation therapy for stage I and
nonbulky stage II disease
  • The Medical Research Council compared adjuvant
    carboplatin with radiotherapy and found
    equivalent relapse rates after a median follow-up
    period of 4 years. Long-term success of
    carboplatin therapy is unknown so should be
    considered experimental at this time (Oliver, 20

34
Chemotherapy for stage II bulky or stage III
disease
  • Clinical trials have evaluated numerous
    chemotherapeutic regimens. While the optimal
    regimen is debatable, 4 cycles of bleomycin,
    etoposide, and cisplatin (BEP) is standard.
  • Ongoing clinical trials are evaluating the
    omission of the fourth cycle, or bleomycin, in
    good-risk patients.
  • For poor-risk and salvage cases, physicians may
    use alternative regimens using ifosfamide and
    vinblastine with dose escalation

35
Germ cell tumor staging and treatment
36
Germ cell tumor staging and treatment
37
Germ cell tumor staging and treatment
38
CASE BEP regimen
  • Bleomycin
  • Antitumor antibiotics
  • Mucositis
  • Fever
  • Skin change
  • No myelosuppression And N/V
  • Cisplatin
  • Alkylating agents
  • N/V
  • nephrotoxicity
  • Etoposide
  • Topoisomerase inhibitor
  • Myelosuppression
  • N/V
  • Alopecia
  • Mucositis
  • Hypersensitivity
  • Hypotension
  • Second leukemia

39
Young male with cryptorchidiasm
Pelvic mass
Elevate b hCG
Testicular seminoma stge IIc
BEP regimen
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