Postchemotherapy RLND can be omitted in patients with MTU in the primary tumor who have normal AFP/human chorionic gonadotropin (AFP/HCG) before chemotherapy and whose residual retroperitoneal mass is less than 20 mm in diameter. If the pre-RLND tumor markers are normal, RLND should be performed in all other patients with small residual masses, even in the presence of a normal computed tomography (CT) and particularly if regular follow-up of the patients is not guaranteed.
A total of 111 patients with advanced nonseminomatous testicular cancer underwent cisplatin-based combination chemotherapy, followed by surgical removal of residual masses in 101. Surgery included retroperitoneal lymph node dissection in 92 patients, thoracotomy in 19 and hepatic resection in 1 (11 patients underwent 2 operations). Complete necrosis and/or fibrosis was found in 52 operative specimens, mature teratoma in 37 and vital malignant tumor in 12. Of the 11 patients who underwent 2 operations 4 had complete necrosis and/or fibrosis in both histological specimens. After a median observation of 55 months 83 of 89 patients with complete necrosis and/or fibrosis or mature teratoma were without evidence of disease. Only 7 of 12 patients with vital malignant tumor in the operative specimen survived without evidence of disease. Relapses were observed in 16 patients, 4 of them in the retroperitoneal space. Of the 16 relapses 5 were in 12 patients with residual vital malignant tumor, 5 in 37 patients with post-chemotherapy mature teratoma and 4 in 52 patients with complete necrosis and/or fibrosis after chemotherapy. Two patients with recurrence did not undergo an operation. In patients in whom post-chemotherapy retroperitoneal lymph node dissection is considered complete necrosis and/or fibrosis can be predicted by the combination of several factors, including absence of teratomatous elements in the testicular tumor, complete response on post-chemotherapy computerized tomography, and normal alpha-fetoprotein and human chorionic gonadotropin levels after chemotherapy (sensitivity 83%, specificity 76% and correctly predicted 79%). With the knowledge of these factors it seems possible to omit post-chemotherapy retroperitoneal lymph node dissection in approximately 20% of the patients with advanced metastatic nonseminomatous testicular cancer with initial retroperitoneal tumors.
SummaryThe purpose of this study was to evaluate fertility after different types of post-chemotherapy retroperitoneal lymph node dissection (RPLND). During 1980During -1994 patients with metastatic testicular cancer underwent post-chemotherapy RPLND with a gradual shift from modified bilateral template RPLND to nerve-sparing RPLND. Modified bilateral template RPLND was done in 92% of the patients operated during 1980-1984 as compared to 16% during 1989-1994. Pre-and post-treatment fertility was assessed by microscopic sperm analysis, determination of serum FSH and information on ejaculation and paternity. There was no significant difference of the survival rates between the three treatment periods. Antegrade ejaculation was preserved in 11% of the patients after modified bilateral template RPLND as compared to 89% after the nerve-sparing operation technique. The median ejaculatory volume decreased post-operatively, serum FSH increased and sperm density remained unchanged. Fifty-six patients attempted fatherhood after their treatment, and 27 fathered at least one child after an observation-time of 55 months, nine of them by assisted fertilization. Patients with initially advanced testicular cancer but limited residual retroperitoneal masses after induction chemotherapy can safely undergo limited post-chemotherapy RPLND as a part of multimodality treatment. After nerve-sparing RPLND antegrade ejaculation is preserved in 89% of the patients though the ejaculatory volume decreases after RPLND. Post-treatment fatherhood can be achieved in at least 50% of the patients attempting paternity.
Cellular and nuclear DNA content was measured by flow cytometry and the fraction of binucleated cells by fluorescence microscopy in normal adult human livers, hepatocellular carcinomas, cirrhotic livers surrounding tumors, and in some benign liver conditions. In five normal livers about one-half of the hepatocytes were polyploid; the majority of these were binucleated tetraploids containing two diploid nuclei. Thus, polyploidization in human liver does not progress as far as, for example, in the rat, where 80%-90% of adult hepatocytes are polyploid, mostly with tetraploid or octoploid nuclei. In five human euploid hepatocellular carcinomas and one investigated case of focal nodular hyperplasia, the percentage of polyploid cells was significantly reduced. Four other carcinomas exhibited a prominent aneuploid (hypotetraploid) peak in addition to the diploid peak. An abnormally low fraction of binucleated cells was also indicated in these tumors. Liver tissue surrounding the tumors had a ploidy distribution similar to that of normal liver. The results suggest that, like in several models of experimental hepatocarcinogenesis, human hepatocellular tumor growth is associated with a decreased polyploidization tendency and a corresponding increase in diploid, divisional growth, which may give the tumors a growth advantage relative to the surrounding liver.
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