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Incidence of Metachronous Testicular Cancer in Patients With Extragonadal Germ Cell Tumors

162

Citations

25

References

2001

Year

TLDR

The incidence of subsequent testicular cancer is high among men with prior testicular cancer, yet its rate in those with extragonadal germ cell tumors remains largely unknown. This retrospective study assessed EGCT patients to determine the incidence, cumulative risk, and risk factors for metachronous testicular cancers. The authors reviewed 635 EGCT patients from 11 centers, used a standardized questionnaire, compared incidence to population data to compute standardized incidence ratios, and applied Kaplan‑Meier analysis to estimate cumulative risk. Sixteen EGCT patients (4.1%) developed metachronous testicular cancers, producing a markedly elevated standardized incidence ratio of 62 overall and 31–100 in specific subgroups, and a 10‑year cumulative risk of 10.3% that was higher among nonseminomatous and retroperitoneal tumors.

Abstract

The frequency of subsequent testicular cancer (referred to as metachronous testicular cancer) in men who have had previous testicular cancer is relatively high. The rate of metachronous testicular cancer in men with extragonadal germ cell tumors (EGCTs), however, is largely unknown. We conducted a retrospective study of EGCT patients to determine the incidence, cumulative risk, and specific risk factors for metachronous testicular cancers.A standardized questionnaire about patient characteristics, the extent of EGCT disease, any second malignancies, and treatments received was completed for 635 patients with EGCTs identified from the medical records of 11 cancer centers in Europe and the United States from 1975 through 1996. Comparisons with age group-specific data from the Saarland, Germany, population-based cancer registry were used to calculate the standardized incidence ratio (SIR). The Kaplan-Meier method was used to analyze survival data and cumulative risk. All statistical tests were two-sided.Sixteen EGCT patients (4.1%) developed metachronous testicular cancers, with a median time between diagnoses of 60 months (range, 14-102 months). The risk of developing metachronous testicular cancers was statistically significantly increased in patients with EGCTs (observed = 16; expected = 0.26; SIR = 62; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 36 to 99) and in subsets of EGCT patients with mediastinal location (SIR = 31; 95% CI = 8 to 59), retroperitoneal location (SIR = 100; 95% CI = 54 to 172), and nonseminomatous histology (SIR = 75; 95% CI = 43 to 123). The cumulative risk of developing a metachronous testicular cancer 10 years after a diagnosis of EGCT was 10.3% (95% CI = 4.9% to 15.6%) and was higher among patients with nonseminomatous EGCTs (14.3%; 95% CI = 6.7% to 21.9%) and retroperitoneal EGCTs (14.2%; 95% CI = 5.6% to 22.8%) than among patients with seminomatous EGCTs (1.4%; 95% CI = 0.0% to 4.2%) and mediastinal EGCTs (6.2%; 95% CI = 0.1% to 12.2%).Patients with EGCTs, particularly those with retroperitoneal or nonseminomatous tumors, but also those with primary mediastinal EGCTs, are at an increased risk of metachronous testicular cancer.

References

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