Testicular germ cell tumour arising 15 years after radiotherapy with 18 Gy for germ cell neoplasia in situ

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Testicular germ cell tumour arising 15 years after radiotherapy with 18 Gy for germ cell neoplasia in situ. / Dieckmann, Klaus-Peter; Tribius, Silke; Angerer, Mathias; Salzbrunn, Andrea; von Kopylow, Kathrein; Mollenhauer, Martin; Wülfing, Christian.

in: STRAHLENTHER ONKOL, Jahrgang 199, Nr. 3, 03.2023, S. 322-326.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

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@article{9f544b980fdc4681aac96b766586c22c,
title = "Testicular germ cell tumour arising 15 years after radiotherapy with 18 Gy for germ cell neoplasia in situ",
abstract = "PURPOSE: Germ cell neoplasia in situ (GCNis), the precursor of adult testicular germ cell tumours (GCTs), is found in 5-6% of contralateral testicles in patients with testicular GCT and in the tumour-surrounding tissue of > 90% of testes undergoing testis-sparing surgery (TSS) for GCT. Local radiotherapy to the testis with 18-20 Gy eradicates GCNis while preserving Leydig cells. The frequency of treatment failures is so far unknown.METHODS: A 22-year-old patient with right-sided seminoma clinical stage I and contralateral GCNis received radiotherapy with 18 Gy to his left testicle. Fifteen years later he underwent orchiectomy of the irradiated testis for seminoma with adjacent GCNis. The patient is well 1 year postoperatively while on testosterone-replacement therapy. The literature was searched for further cases with GCTs arising despite local radiotherapy.RESULTS: Six failures of radiotherapy have been reported previously. An estimated total number of 200 and 100 radiotherapeutic regimens with 18-20 Gy applied to cases with contralateral GCNis and with TSS, respectively, are documented in the literature.CONCLUSION: Cumulative experience suggests that radiotherapy with 18-20 Gy to the testis may fail with an estimated frequency of around 1%. Reasons for failure are elusive. A primary radioresistant subfraction of GCNis is hypothesized as well as technical failures regarding application of the radiotherapeutic dose volume in small and mobile testes. Caregivers of patients with TSS and contralateral GCNis should be aware of local relapses occurring after intervals of > 10 years.",
author = "Klaus-Peter Dieckmann and Silke Tribius and Mathias Angerer and Andrea Salzbrunn and {von Kopylow}, Kathrein and Martin Mollenhauer and Christian W{\"u}lfing",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany.",
year = "2023",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1007/s00066-022-02025-x",
language = "English",
volume = "199",
pages = "322--326",
journal = "STRAHLENTHER ONKOL",
issn = "0179-7158",
publisher = "Urban und Vogel",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Testicular germ cell tumour arising 15 years after radiotherapy with 18 Gy for germ cell neoplasia in situ

AU - Dieckmann, Klaus-Peter

AU - Tribius, Silke

AU - Angerer, Mathias

AU - Salzbrunn, Andrea

AU - von Kopylow, Kathrein

AU - Mollenhauer, Martin

AU - Wülfing, Christian

N1 - © 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany.

PY - 2023/3

Y1 - 2023/3

N2 - PURPOSE: Germ cell neoplasia in situ (GCNis), the precursor of adult testicular germ cell tumours (GCTs), is found in 5-6% of contralateral testicles in patients with testicular GCT and in the tumour-surrounding tissue of > 90% of testes undergoing testis-sparing surgery (TSS) for GCT. Local radiotherapy to the testis with 18-20 Gy eradicates GCNis while preserving Leydig cells. The frequency of treatment failures is so far unknown.METHODS: A 22-year-old patient with right-sided seminoma clinical stage I and contralateral GCNis received radiotherapy with 18 Gy to his left testicle. Fifteen years later he underwent orchiectomy of the irradiated testis for seminoma with adjacent GCNis. The patient is well 1 year postoperatively while on testosterone-replacement therapy. The literature was searched for further cases with GCTs arising despite local radiotherapy.RESULTS: Six failures of radiotherapy have been reported previously. An estimated total number of 200 and 100 radiotherapeutic regimens with 18-20 Gy applied to cases with contralateral GCNis and with TSS, respectively, are documented in the literature.CONCLUSION: Cumulative experience suggests that radiotherapy with 18-20 Gy to the testis may fail with an estimated frequency of around 1%. Reasons for failure are elusive. A primary radioresistant subfraction of GCNis is hypothesized as well as technical failures regarding application of the radiotherapeutic dose volume in small and mobile testes. Caregivers of patients with TSS and contralateral GCNis should be aware of local relapses occurring after intervals of > 10 years.

AB - PURPOSE: Germ cell neoplasia in situ (GCNis), the precursor of adult testicular germ cell tumours (GCTs), is found in 5-6% of contralateral testicles in patients with testicular GCT and in the tumour-surrounding tissue of > 90% of testes undergoing testis-sparing surgery (TSS) for GCT. Local radiotherapy to the testis with 18-20 Gy eradicates GCNis while preserving Leydig cells. The frequency of treatment failures is so far unknown.METHODS: A 22-year-old patient with right-sided seminoma clinical stage I and contralateral GCNis received radiotherapy with 18 Gy to his left testicle. Fifteen years later he underwent orchiectomy of the irradiated testis for seminoma with adjacent GCNis. The patient is well 1 year postoperatively while on testosterone-replacement therapy. The literature was searched for further cases with GCTs arising despite local radiotherapy.RESULTS: Six failures of radiotherapy have been reported previously. An estimated total number of 200 and 100 radiotherapeutic regimens with 18-20 Gy applied to cases with contralateral GCNis and with TSS, respectively, are documented in the literature.CONCLUSION: Cumulative experience suggests that radiotherapy with 18-20 Gy to the testis may fail with an estimated frequency of around 1%. Reasons for failure are elusive. A primary radioresistant subfraction of GCNis is hypothesized as well as technical failures regarding application of the radiotherapeutic dose volume in small and mobile testes. Caregivers of patients with TSS and contralateral GCNis should be aware of local relapses occurring after intervals of > 10 years.

U2 - 10.1007/s00066-022-02025-x

DO - 10.1007/s00066-022-02025-x

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 36441172

VL - 199

SP - 322

EP - 326

JO - STRAHLENTHER ONKOL

JF - STRAHLENTHER ONKOL

SN - 0179-7158

IS - 3

ER -