How to classify, diagnose, treat and follow-up extragonadal germ cell tumors? A systematic review of available evidence

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How to classify, diagnose, treat and follow-up extragonadal germ cell tumors? A systematic review of available evidence. / Winter, Christian; Zengerling, Friedemann; Busch, Jonas; Heinzelbecker, Julia; Pfister, David; Ruf, Christian; Lackner, Julia; Albers, Peter; Kliesch, Sabine; Schmidt, Stefanie; Bokemeyer, Carsten.

In: WORLD J UROL, Vol. 40, No. 12, 12.2022, p. 2863-2878.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Review articleResearch

Harvard

Winter, C, Zengerling, F, Busch, J, Heinzelbecker, J, Pfister, D, Ruf, C, Lackner, J, Albers, P, Kliesch, S, Schmidt, S & Bokemeyer, C 2022, 'How to classify, diagnose, treat and follow-up extragonadal germ cell tumors? A systematic review of available evidence', WORLD J UROL, vol. 40, no. 12, pp. 2863-2878. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00345-022-04009-z

APA

Winter, C., Zengerling, F., Busch, J., Heinzelbecker, J., Pfister, D., Ruf, C., Lackner, J., Albers, P., Kliesch, S., Schmidt, S., & Bokemeyer, C. (2022). How to classify, diagnose, treat and follow-up extragonadal germ cell tumors? A systematic review of available evidence. WORLD J UROL, 40(12), 2863-2878. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00345-022-04009-z

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{3c791d66f084438b9ed809c66889987d,
title = "How to classify, diagnose, treat and follow-up extragonadal germ cell tumors? A systematic review of available evidence",
abstract = "PURPOSE: To present the current evidence and the development of studies in recent years on the management of extragonadal germ cell tumors (EGCT).METHODS: A systematic literature search was conducted in Medline and the Cochrane Library. Studies within the search period (January 2010 to February 2021) that addressed the classification, diagnosis, prognosis, treatment, and follow-up of extragonadal tumors were included. Risk of bias was assessed and relevant data were extracted in evidence tables.RESULTS: The systematic search identified nine studies. Germ cell tumors (GCT) arise predominantly from within the testis, but about 5% of the tumors are primarily located extragonadal. EGCT are localized primarily mediastinal or retroperitoneal in the midline of the body. EGCT patients are classified according to the IGCCCG classification. Consecutively, all mediastinal non-seminomatous EGCT patients belong to the {"}poor prognosis{"} group. In contrast mediastinal seminoma and both retroperitoneal seminoma and non-seminoma patients seem to have a similar prognosis as patients with gonadal GCTs and metastasis at theses respective sites. The standard chemotherapy regimen for patients with a EGCT consists of 3-4 cycles (good vs intermediate prognosis) of bleomycin, etoposid, cisplatin (BEP); however, due to their very poor prognosis patients with non-seminomatous mediastinal GCT should receive a dose-intensified or high-dose chemotherapy approach upfront on an individual basis and should thus be referred to expert centers Ifosfamide may be exchanged for bleomycin in cases of additional pulmonary metastasis due to subsequently planned resections. In general patients with non-seminomatous EGCT, residual tumor resection (RTR) should be performed after chemotherapy.CONCLUSION: In general, non-seminomatous EGCT have a poorer prognosis compared to testicular GCT, while seminomatous EGGCT seem to have a similar prognosis to patients with metastatic testicular seminoma. The current insights on EGCT are limited, since all data are mainly based on case series and studies with small patient numbers and non-comparative studies. In general, systemic treatment should be performed like in testicular metastatic GCTs but upfront dose intensification of chemotherapy should be considered for mediastinal non-seminoma patients. Thus, EGCT should be referred to interdisciplinary centers with utmost experience in the treatment of germ cell tumors.",
author = "Christian Winter and Friedemann Zengerling and Jonas Busch and Julia Heinzelbecker and David Pfister and Christian Ruf and Julia Lackner and Peter Albers and Sabine Kliesch and Stefanie Schmidt and Carsten Bokemeyer",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2022. The Author(s).",
year = "2022",
month = dec,
doi = "10.1007/s00345-022-04009-z",
language = "English",
volume = "40",
pages = "2863--2878",
journal = "WORLD J UROL",
issn = "0724-4983",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "12",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - How to classify, diagnose, treat and follow-up extragonadal germ cell tumors? A systematic review of available evidence

AU - Winter, Christian

AU - Zengerling, Friedemann

AU - Busch, Jonas

AU - Heinzelbecker, Julia

AU - Pfister, David

AU - Ruf, Christian

AU - Lackner, Julia

AU - Albers, Peter

AU - Kliesch, Sabine

AU - Schmidt, Stefanie

AU - Bokemeyer, Carsten

N1 - © 2022. The Author(s).

PY - 2022/12

Y1 - 2022/12

N2 - PURPOSE: To present the current evidence and the development of studies in recent years on the management of extragonadal germ cell tumors (EGCT).METHODS: A systematic literature search was conducted in Medline and the Cochrane Library. Studies within the search period (January 2010 to February 2021) that addressed the classification, diagnosis, prognosis, treatment, and follow-up of extragonadal tumors were included. Risk of bias was assessed and relevant data were extracted in evidence tables.RESULTS: The systematic search identified nine studies. Germ cell tumors (GCT) arise predominantly from within the testis, but about 5% of the tumors are primarily located extragonadal. EGCT are localized primarily mediastinal or retroperitoneal in the midline of the body. EGCT patients are classified according to the IGCCCG classification. Consecutively, all mediastinal non-seminomatous EGCT patients belong to the "poor prognosis" group. In contrast mediastinal seminoma and both retroperitoneal seminoma and non-seminoma patients seem to have a similar prognosis as patients with gonadal GCTs and metastasis at theses respective sites. The standard chemotherapy regimen for patients with a EGCT consists of 3-4 cycles (good vs intermediate prognosis) of bleomycin, etoposid, cisplatin (BEP); however, due to their very poor prognosis patients with non-seminomatous mediastinal GCT should receive a dose-intensified or high-dose chemotherapy approach upfront on an individual basis and should thus be referred to expert centers Ifosfamide may be exchanged for bleomycin in cases of additional pulmonary metastasis due to subsequently planned resections. In general patients with non-seminomatous EGCT, residual tumor resection (RTR) should be performed after chemotherapy.CONCLUSION: In general, non-seminomatous EGCT have a poorer prognosis compared to testicular GCT, while seminomatous EGGCT seem to have a similar prognosis to patients with metastatic testicular seminoma. The current insights on EGCT are limited, since all data are mainly based on case series and studies with small patient numbers and non-comparative studies. In general, systemic treatment should be performed like in testicular metastatic GCTs but upfront dose intensification of chemotherapy should be considered for mediastinal non-seminoma patients. Thus, EGCT should be referred to interdisciplinary centers with utmost experience in the treatment of germ cell tumors.

AB - PURPOSE: To present the current evidence and the development of studies in recent years on the management of extragonadal germ cell tumors (EGCT).METHODS: A systematic literature search was conducted in Medline and the Cochrane Library. Studies within the search period (January 2010 to February 2021) that addressed the classification, diagnosis, prognosis, treatment, and follow-up of extragonadal tumors were included. Risk of bias was assessed and relevant data were extracted in evidence tables.RESULTS: The systematic search identified nine studies. Germ cell tumors (GCT) arise predominantly from within the testis, but about 5% of the tumors are primarily located extragonadal. EGCT are localized primarily mediastinal or retroperitoneal in the midline of the body. EGCT patients are classified according to the IGCCCG classification. Consecutively, all mediastinal non-seminomatous EGCT patients belong to the "poor prognosis" group. In contrast mediastinal seminoma and both retroperitoneal seminoma and non-seminoma patients seem to have a similar prognosis as patients with gonadal GCTs and metastasis at theses respective sites. The standard chemotherapy regimen for patients with a EGCT consists of 3-4 cycles (good vs intermediate prognosis) of bleomycin, etoposid, cisplatin (BEP); however, due to their very poor prognosis patients with non-seminomatous mediastinal GCT should receive a dose-intensified or high-dose chemotherapy approach upfront on an individual basis and should thus be referred to expert centers Ifosfamide may be exchanged for bleomycin in cases of additional pulmonary metastasis due to subsequently planned resections. In general patients with non-seminomatous EGCT, residual tumor resection (RTR) should be performed after chemotherapy.CONCLUSION: In general, non-seminomatous EGCT have a poorer prognosis compared to testicular GCT, while seminomatous EGGCT seem to have a similar prognosis to patients with metastatic testicular seminoma. The current insights on EGCT are limited, since all data are mainly based on case series and studies with small patient numbers and non-comparative studies. In general, systemic treatment should be performed like in testicular metastatic GCTs but upfront dose intensification of chemotherapy should be considered for mediastinal non-seminoma patients. Thus, EGCT should be referred to interdisciplinary centers with utmost experience in the treatment of germ cell tumors.

U2 - 10.1007/s00345-022-04009-z

DO - 10.1007/s00345-022-04009-z

M3 - SCORING: Review article

C2 - 35554637

VL - 40

SP - 2863

EP - 2878

JO - WORLD J UROL

JF - WORLD J UROL

SN - 0724-4983

IS - 12

ER -