Comparison of clinical characteristics of testicular tumor between children and adult population: a retrospective analysis.

BMC Cancer

Department of Urology, Anhui Provincial Children's Hospital, Children's Hospital of Fudan University (Affiliated Anhui Branch), No. 39 Wangjing East Road, Hefei, 230000, Anhui Province, People's Republic of China.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study aimed to compare clinical and histological differences between testicular tumors (TT) in children and adults by analyzing data from two hospitals over a ten-year span, from 2014 to 2024.
  • - A total of 195 patients were analyzed, with 135 children (mean age 2.32 years) and 60 adults (mean age 34.08 years), revealing a higher incidence of TT in younger children and different tumor types predominating in each age group.
  • - The most common initial symptom in both children and adults was a painless scrotal mass, and significant differences were found in tumor characteristics based on age, size, and histological type.

Article Abstract

Objective: Testicular tumor (TT) is a uncommon disease posing serious health problem. There are differences in some aspects between adult and pediatric TT. The study was to compare their differences of clinical and histological characteristics through the analysis of the long-term experiences in TT patients from two institutions.

Materials And Methods: The clinical data of hospitalized patients was collected and analyzed retrospectively from January 2014 to January 2024 at a pediatric and an adult institution, respectively. The data included composition, gender, age, initial presentation, tumor size, tumor markers, pathological diagnosis.

Results: A total of 195 hospitalized patients were included. There were 135 children and 60 adult with TT, respectively. Of these children, patients were aged from 1 month to 14 years, with a mean age of 2.32 years. More cases (37.04%) were diagnosed at age younger than 1 years. 69 cases were left-sided, 65 cases were right-side and only 1 case was bilateral. Pediatric TTs mainly included 82 prepubertal teratomas, 37 had prepubertal yolk sac tumors and 3 mixed malignant germ tumors. Testicular surgeries included testicular-sparing surgery (TSS) (n = 73), radical orchiectomy (n = 60), and testicular biopsy (n = 2). There were 24 patients receiving postoperative chemotherapy. Adult TTs mainly contained 17 seminomas, 10 prepubertal teratomas,7 postpubertal teratomas, 6 stromal tumors and 3 embryonal carcinomas. The average age was 34.08 years. There were 29 right-sided, 27 left-sided and 4 bilateral tumors. TSS (n = 26), radical orchiectomy (n = 33), and testicular biopsy (n = 1) were performed in these TT patients. Only 6 patients received postoperative chemotherapy. The most common symptom was a painless scrotal mass at initial diagnosis in both groups. In addition, we found that significant differences were explored between histological type and age, tumor size (P < 0.05). Yolk sac tumor and seminoma were the most common malignant TT in pediatric and adult population, respectively. After two year follow-up, two children with yolk sac tumor and 4 adults with seminoma died of their diseases.

Conclusions: The majority of pediatric cases were benign compared to adult. The most common type was prepubertal teratoma and yolk sac tumor. Pediatric TTs often occurred under the age of 1 year. Seminomas and prepubertal teratomas were commonly found in adult TTs, especially for young adult. We found that pediatric tumor type was associated with age and tumor size. TSS should be considered for benign TTs based on frozen biopsy findings in children.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11484207PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12885-024-12984-2DOI Listing

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