Urology - testicular cancer Flashcards

1
Q

What are the two types of testicular cancer?

A

Seminomas

Non-seminomas

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2
Q

Risk factors for testicular cancer

A

Undescended testes
Male infertility
Family history
Increased height

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3
Q

Presentation of testicular cancer

A

Typically a painless lump (but can present with pain)

Lump will be:

  • Non-tender (or even reduced sensation)
  • Arising from testicle
  • Hard and irregular
  • Not fluctuant, no transillumination

Can also get gynaecomastia - so ask about this

  • Associated with a rare type of testicular cancer called Leydig cell tumour
  • Only 2% of gynaecomastia is testicular tumour
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4
Q

Investigations in suspected testicular tumour

A

2WW referral

Scrotal ultrasound - usual initial investigation

Tumour markers:

  • AFP - raised in teratomas (not in pure seminomas)
  • Beta-HCG - can be raised in both teratomas and seminomas
  • LDH - non-specific

Staging CT scan to stage the cancer and look for metastases

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5
Q

What is the Staging System used for testicular cancer?

A

Royal Marsden staging system

Stage 1 – isolated to the testicle
Stage 2 – spread to the retroperitoneal lymph nodes
Stage 3 – spread to the lymph nodes above the diaphragm
Stage 4 – metastasised to other organs

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6
Q

Common places that testicular cancer metastasises to?

A

Lymphatics
Lungs
Liver
Brain

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7
Q

Management of testicular cancer

A

2WW referral
MDT discussion to decide best course of action

Options include:

  • Surgery to removal testicle (radical orchidectomy)
  • Chemotherapy
  • Radiotherapy
  • Sperm banking to save sperm for future use (treatment can cause infertility)
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8
Q

Side effects of treatment of testicular cancer

A
Infertility
Hypogonadism (testosterone replacement may be required)
Peripheral neuropathy
Hearing loss
Lasting kidney, liver or heart damage
Increased risk of cancer in the future
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9
Q

Prognosis of testicular cancer

A

Good prognosis

> 90% cure rate and metastatic disease is also often curable

Patients will need regular follow-up for recurrence - usually by monitoring tumour markers and may include imaging e.g. CT

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