Diagnosis and Treatment of a Mixed Epithelial Stromal Tumor of the Seminal Vesicle: A Systematic Review.

Urology

Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY; Department of Urology, Montefiore Medical Center, Bronx, NY. Electronic address:

Published: September 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study conducted a systematic review of mixed epithelial stromal tumors in the seminal vesicle, focusing on diagnosis and treatment options for this rare condition.
  • A total of 66 articles were reviewed, leading to 34 articles (involving 36 patients) detailing common symptoms, biopsy results, and surgical techniques used for treatment.
  • Findings indicated that most tumors were low-grade, with a significant number of biopsies being inconclusive, suggesting that surgical excision is often more effective for symptom relief and accurate diagnosis.

Article Abstract

Objective: To perform a systematic review of mixed epithelial stromal tumor of the seminal vesicle (SV) to characterize the diagnosis and treatment of this rare condition.

Methods: "Seminal vesicle mixed epithelial stromal tumor" OR "seminal vesicle cystadenoma" were searched on PubMed/MEDLINE for relevant articles through 6 September 2021. Articles were eligible if they were in English, accessible via our university library services, and if the abstract was concordant with the content of the publication. Reference lists of included articles were reviewed to identify additional relevant articles.

Results: In total, 66 articles were identified, of which 34 (N = 36 patients) were included. The most common presenting symptoms were lower urinary tract symptoms (33%, 12/36), dysuria (22%, 8/36), lower abdominal pain (17%, 6/36), and hematuria (17%, 6/36). However, there were eight cases (23%, 8/36) of asymptomatic incidental SV tumors. A biopsy was performed in 47% of cases (17/36), of which 53% (9/17) showed benign findings, 29% (5/17) were inconclusive, and 18% (3/17) SV cystadenoma. Surgical resection was performed using open (57%, 20/35), laparoscopic (26%, 9/35), or robotic (17%, 6/35) techniques. The majority (94%, 34/36) of the SV tumors were low-grade. Long-term follow-up was reported for 15 patients in which two patients (13%, 2/15) had tumor recurrence.

Conclusion: High rate of inconclusive biopsy of SV tumors suggests that routine biopsy is of questionable utility. Surgical excision frequently relieves symptoms and confirms accurate pathologic diagnosis. After tumor removal, patients should be surveilled with cross-sectional imaging of the pelvis given the possibility of tumor recurrence.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.urology.2022.02.012DOI Listing

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