AI Article Synopsis

  • 28 out of 108 patients with nonseminomatous testicular carcinoma had lung metastases and were treated with combination chemotherapy (PVB)
  • 11 patients underwent exploratory thoracotomy, revealing viable cancer tissue in 4 cases, alongside fibrosis and necrosis
  • Successful re-treatment with a different chemotherapy regimen occurred in 3 patients, highlighting thoracotomy's role as a necessary diagnostic step to confirm viable carcinoma for further treatment.

Article Abstract

Of 108 patients with a nonseminomatous testicular carcinoma, 28 with lung metastases were studied. After combination chemotherapy with cisplatin, vinblastine, and bleomycin (PVB), 11 patients underwent exploratory thoracotomy. Viable carcinomatous tissue, along with fibrosis, necrosis, and mature teratoma, was found in 4 patients. Three of these patients were successfully retreated with VP 16-213, cisplatin, and actinomycin D. In patients with residual pulmonary or mediastinal masses after chemotherapy, resection of the lesions is mandatory to demonstrate viable carcinoma so that treatment can be readministered. Thus, in our view, thoracotomy is a diagnostic procedure.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0003-4975(10)64182-3DOI Listing

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