AI Article Synopsis

  • Postchemotherapy residual tumor resection (PC-RTR) is crucial for treating patients with metastatic germ cell tumors, especially those with simultaneous retroperitoneal and thoracic metastases, and this study examines the histological differences following both surgical procedures.
  • The research focused on 50 patients with stage III non-seminomatous germ cell tumor (NSGCT) who underwent a combination of retroperitoneal and thoracic surgeries after receiving chemotherapy, revealing a significant discordance in histology between the two sites in 23% of cases.
  • The findings suggest that retroperitoneal masses with necrosis do not reliably indicate the histology of thoracic specimens, while patients with teratoma in the retroperitone

Article Abstract

Introduction And Objectives: Postchemotherapy residual tumor resection (PC-RTR) is an important part of the multimodal treatment for patients with metastatic germ cell tumors. Simultaneous retroperitoneal and thoracic metastases often require consecutive surgical procedures. This study analyzes the histologic findings after abdominal and thoracic surgery in order to tailor the sequence and intensity of surgery.

Patients And Methods: From a total of 671 PC-RTRs from 2008 to 2021 we analyzed 50 patients with stage III non-seminomatous germ cell tumor (NSGCT) who had undergone both retroperitoneal and thoracic postchemotherapy residual tumor resection after first-line and salvage chemotherapy.

Results: All patients included had stage III NSGCT. 39 and 11 patients received first-line and salvage chemotherapy, respectively. 45 (90%) patients received retroperitoneal resection first, followed by thoracic surgery. Three patients (6%) underwent thoracic surgery before retroperitoneal surgery and two patients (4%) underwent simultaneous surgery. Overall, the histology of retroperitoneal and thoracic specimens was discordant in 23% of cases. After first-line chemotherapy, of fourteen patients with necrosis in retroperitoneal histology, four patients had vital carcinoma in lung histology. In patients with teratoma in the retroperitoneum, the thoracic findings were concordant in most cases (78%). When teratomatous elements were also present in the orchiectomy specimen, concordance was 100%. After salvage chemotherapy, the discordance rate was 55%.

Conclusion: The data presented in this study underline that retroperitoneal residual masses with necrosis cannot reliably predict histologic findings of thoracic specimens. Patients with teratoma in the retroperitoneum have a high likelihood of teratoma in the thoracic specimen.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11253360PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12957-024-03467-6DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

retroperitoneal thoracic
16
histologic findings
12
patients
12
germ cell
12
postchemotherapy residual
12
residual tumor
12
tumor resection
12
thoracic surgery
12
thoracic
10
patients metastatic
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!