Testicular cancers - The Royal Marsden
Transcription
Testicular cancers - The Royal Marsden
The Royal Marsden Testicular cancers Mr Erik Mayer Consultant Urological surgeon, The Royal Marsden 2 The Royal Marsden Contents − Referral Guidelines − Diagnostics − Common misdiagnosis – Differential Diagnosis – The newly diagnosed cancer patient – The awkward Scrotum 3 The Royal Marsden Referral Guidelines The Royal Marsden Quiz 5 The Royal Marsden Question 1 1. Testicular torsion 2. Torted hydatid of Morgagni 3. Epididymal cyst(s) 4. Microlithiasis 5. Hydrocoele 6. Varicocoele 7. Epididymo-orchitis 8. Hernia 9. Testicular Rupture 10. Testicular Germ Cell Tumour 6 The Royal Marsden Question 1. 81% 9% 2% re 0% up tu oor ch i co e tis le 2% ul a Te st ic id ym Ep id cy al id ym 2% Hy dr o io n or s rt Ep id ul a st ic 0% st (s) 0% rR 4% Te 1. Testicular torsion 2. Torted hydatid of Morgagni 3. Epididymal cyst(s) 4. Microlithiasis 5. Hydrocoele 6. Varicocoele 7. Epididymo-orchitis 8. Hernia 9. Testicular Rupture 10. Testicular Germ Cell Tumour 0% 7 The Royal Marsden Question 2 1. Testicular torsion 2. Torted hydatid of Morgagni 3. Epididymal cyst(s) 4. Microlithiasis 5. Hydrocoele 6. Varicocoele 7. Epididymo-orchitis 8. Hernia 9. Testicular Rupture 10. Testicular Germ Cell Tumour 8 The Royal Marsden Question 2 67% 10% 9% 9% 3% 1% up tu tis Te st ic ul a rR oor ch i co e id ym Ep id 1% re 0% le 0% Hy dr o cy al id ym Ep id st ic ul a rt or s io n st (s) 0% Te 1. Testicular torsion 2. Torted hydatid of Morgagni 3. Epididymal cyst(s) 4. Microlithiasis 5. Hydrocoele 6. Varicocoele 7. Epididymo-orchitis 8. Hernia 9. Testicular Rupture 10. Testicular Germ Cell Tumour 9 The Royal Marsden Question 3 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Testicular torsion Torted hydatid of Morgagni Epididymal cyst(s) Microlithiasis Hydrocoele Varicocoele Epididymo-orchitis Hernia Adenomatoid Tumour Testicular Germ Cell Tumour 10 The Royal Marsden Question 3 74% 11% 1% id Tu m ou r tis Ad en om at o oor ch i co e Ep id cy al id ym Hy dr o st (s) io n or s rt Ep id ul a st ic 5% 3% 0% le 1% id ym 3% 0% Te 1. Testicular torsion 2. Torted hydatid of Morgagni 3. Epididymal cyst(s) 4. Microlithiasis 5. Hydrocoele 6. Varicocoele 7. Epididymo-orchitis 8. Hernia 9. Adenomatoid Tumour 10. Testicular Germ Cell Tumour 3% 11 The Royal Marsden Question 4 1. Testicular torsion 2. Torted hydatid of Morgagni 3. Epididymal cyst(s) 4. Microlithiasis 5. Hydrocoele 6. Varicocoele 7. Epididymo-orchitis 8. Hernia 9. Testicular Rupture 10. Testicular Germ Cell Tumour 12 The Royal Marsden Question 4 72% 23% 0% up tu tis Te st ic ul a rR oor ch i co e 2% re 0% le 0% id ym Ep id cy al id ym 0% Hy dr o io n or s rt Ep id ul a st ic 2% st (s) 2% Te 1. Testicular torsion 2. Torted hydatid of Morgagni 3. Epididymal cyst(s) 4. Microlithiasis 5. Hydrocoele 6. Varicocoele 7. Epididymo-orchitis 8. Hernia 9. Testicular Rupture 10. Testicular Germ Cell Tumour 0% 13 The Royal Marsden Question 5 1. Testicular torsion 2. Torted hydatid of Morgagni 3. Epididymal cyst(s) 4. Microlithiasis 5. Hydrocoele 6. Varicocoele 7. Epididymo-orchitis 8. Hernia 9. Testicular Rupture 10. Testicular Germ Cell Tumour Question 5 The Royal Marsden 92% up tu tis ch i Te st ic ul a rR oor 0% 0% re 0% le 0% co e Ep id cy al id ym 3% Hy dr o st (s) io n or s rt Ep id ul a 0% id ym 3% 0% st ic 1. Testicular torsion 2. Torted hydatid of Morgagni 3. Epididymal cyst(s) 4. Microlithiasis 5. Hydrocoele 6. Varicocoele 7. Epididymo-orchitis 8. Hernia 9. Testicular Rupture 10. Testicular Germ Cell Tumour Te 14 2% 15 The Royal Marsden Question 6 1. Testicular torsion 2. Torted hydatid of Morgagni 3. Epididymal cyst(s) 4. Microlithiasis 5. Hydrocoele 6. Varicocoele 7. Epididymo-orchitis 8. Hernia 9. Testicular Germ Cell Tumour 10. Testicular Rupture The Royal Marsden Question 6 58% 11% 11% 8% 6% 5% 0% 0% d Te hy stic da ul tid ar o to Ep f M rsio id id org n ym ag a ni M l cy icr st ol (s) it Hy hia dr sis Ep V oco id ari ele id Te ym coc st ic u o- oel or e la rG ch it i er s m H Ce er n ll T u ia m ou r 2% rte 1. Testicular torsion 2. Torted hydatid of Morgagni 3. Epididymal cyst(s) 4. Microlithiasis 5. Hydrocoele 6. Varicocoele 7. Epididymo-orchitis 8. Hernia 9. Testicular Germ Cell Tumour 10. Testicular rupture To 16 17 The Royal Marsden Diagnostics – History – Clinical Examination – Genitals – Abdomen – Supraclavicular Lymphadenopathy – Urine Dipstick & Pregnancy Test – Tumour Markers – Ultrasound 18 The Royal Marsden History Symptoms • Hard, painless lump - Partner detection • 5-10% scrotal pain • - Intra-tumoural haemorrhage - Trauma brings attention to abnormality • Metastatic - Weight loss - Shortness of Breath - Back/abdominal pain - Neck lumps 19 The Royal Marsden Key Points in a Scrotal Mass History – The Lump – How was it detected (in the bath etc.)? – How long has it been there? – Is it changing in size? – Painful or painless – Sexual history – Any recent STIs – Any lower urinary tract symptoms – Any recent testicular trauma 20 The Royal Marsden Key points continued − Any abdominal or neck lumps (lymphadenopathy) − Any SOB or abdominal pain − PMH − Previous orchidopexy/maldescent of testicle − Have they had testicular US scan before/been encouraged to regularly self examine − FH of testicular Cancer 21 The Royal Marsden Clinical Examination The Royal Marsden Which tumour markers might be raised in testicular cancer? 71% CA 19-9, CA 125 CEA, B-HCG AFP, B-HCG, LDH CA 125, AFP None of the above 23% 6% of th e ab o ve FP 12 5, A No ne CA BAF P, ,B CE A HC G, LD H 0% -H CG 12 5 0% 19 -9 ,C A 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. CA 22 23 The Royal Marsden Tumour Markers AFP - raised in 50-70% of NSGCT – May be elevated with: – hepatic dysfunction, cirrhosis, and – drug or alcohol abuse - normal <10ng/mL – – – Useful in diagnosis, risk stratification & monitoring βhCG - raised in: • 100% Choriocarcinoma • 60% Embryonal carcinoma • 55% Teratocarcinoma • 25% Yolk Cell Tumour • 7% Seminomas - normal <5mIU/mL False positive elevations - marijuana use LDH- ↑in 30% to 80% of pure seminoma and 60% of nonseminomas. 24 The Royal Marsden Ultrasound 25 The Royal Marsden What I discuss with the patient − Diagnosis − Prognosis − CxR/CT scan/tumour markers − Need for Surgery as first line treatment − Testicular Prosthesis − Fertility/Sperm Storage − Possible further treatment 26 The Royal Marsden Headline Statistics – – – – – Affects 7 in 100,000 men Most common solid cancer in men 20-45 Rare below 15 and above 60 Responsible for just over 1% of all male cancers. Estimated that the lifetime risk of developing testicular cancer in 2012 is 1 in 195 for men in the UK. 27 The Royal Marsden Headline Statistics European Age-Standardised Incidence Rates per 100,000 Population, Males, Great Britain 28 The Royal Marsden Headline Statistics European Age-Standardised Mortality Rates per 100,000 Population, Males, UK One-, Five- and Ten-Year Net Survival (%), Adults Aged 15-99, England & Wales 1-Year 5-Year 10-Year Survival (%) Survival (%) Survival (%) Men Net Survival 99.1 98.3 98.2 95% LCL 99.1 98.3 98.2 95% UCL 99.1 98.3 98.2 29 The Royal Marsden Operating is not always best for the patient 30 The Royal Marsden Orchidectomy: Inguinal vs. Scrotal approach – Meta-analysis – Scrotal violation → ↑ local recurrence from 0.4 – 2.9% Capelouto et al., 1995 31 The Royal Marsden Prosthesis – – – – – Infection risk Think Chemotherapy Long-term safety Cosmesis/Migration About 25% uptake 32 The Royal Marsden Sperm Storage – Andrology Lab - Hammersmith – Hep B/C, HIV & CMV screening – No desperate need to do pre-op although is recommended in EAU guidelines (3 samples/3 day abstinence) – Cost associated after year one – Collecting and freezing the samples can cost between £200 and £400. Then you pay about £300 a year to store them – Standard storage period 10 years – Quality of the sperm not guaranteed 33 The Royal Marsden Further Treatment – Oncological outcomes – overall survival – Reducing burden of follow-up – Minimising ‘overtreatment’ and treatment related morbidity 34 The Royal Marsden So it’s NOT Cancer Most testicular lumps are NOT cancer. At a testicular clinic at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, only 76 cancers were found out of 2,000 men seen with a testicular lump. This means that fewer than 4 in every 100 testicular lumps (4%) are cancer The awkward Scrotum 35 The Royal Marsden Differential Diagnosis – Any cause of scrotal lump/pain – Testicular torsion – Torted hydatid of Morgagni – Epididymal cyst(s) – Hydrocoele – Varicocoele – Epididymitis (orchitis) – Hernia – Adenomatoid Tumour Other findings on Ultrasound Microlithiasis Varicocoele 36 The Royal Marsden Microlithiasis – Common – up to 10% men referred for Ultrasound – Increasingly detected with higher frequency US – Is it Premalignant? 37 The Royal Marsden Varicocele – Abnormal dilatation of the testicular veins in the pampiniform plexus – 2-22% incidence of normal men, and 25% of infertile men – Typically pain coming on when standing/ ambulating – No pain at night – 90% Left and 10% bilateral o 10 cms longer and into renal vein. o ‘nutcracker effect’ left renal vein between the aorta and SMA. 38 The Royal Marsden Varicocoele – – – – Grade 0: – subclinical varicocoele. Grade 1: – palpable only with valsalva. Grade 2: – Clinically palpable in upright position. Grade 3: – Gross varicocoele with ‘bag of worms’ visible through skin. – Consider underlying cause if: • Sudden onset of varicocoele • Right sided varicocoele • Does not collapse on being supine 39 The Royal Marsden Varicocoeles and fertility – Varicocoeles do not cause infertility – Routine testing of semen parameters not required – Do not require treatment unless associated with abnormal semen parameters and low testicular volume in the context of infertility – Always consider female infertility factors 40 The Royal Marsden Treatment – Treatment Conservative/embolisation/ ligation – Be guarded about outcome – Natural History may demonstrate improvement 41 The Royal Marsden Torsion – Testicular torsion – Torsion of a testicular appendage (appendix testis, Hydatid of Morgagni) – Torsion – Acute testicular pain (unilateral) – Radiation to lower abdomen – Nausea & vomiting – Negative urine dipstick – Main investigation is scrotal exploration – (Ultrasound) 42 The Royal Marsden Testicular Torsion Torsion of Hydatid 43 The Royal Marsden Torsion − Immediate referral to A&E − No investigation needed − Scrotal exploration, untwisting of testicle and bilateral 3-point fixation with non-absorbable sutures in adult, dartos pouch in children − Warm ischaemia time 6 hours − Torted Hydatid of Morgagni – conservative treatment an option if diagnosis clear 44 The Royal Marsden Infection –Acute epididymitis/Epididymo-orchitis – Bacterial – In older men, UTI organisms – In younger men, Chlamydia and Gonococcus History – Examination; tender swelling of epididymis +/- secondary hydrocoele – 21 days of appropriate antibiotic but warn patient that swelling may persist >6 weeks – Scrotal support – Patient typically ends up with repeat ultrasound 45 The Royal Marsden 46 The Royal Marsden Follow-up Ultrasound – Epididymal/Testicular abscess – Testicular infarction – Underlying tumour 47 The Royal Marsden Infection –Orchitis Can be extension of epididymorchitis Viral • Mumps, ?other viruses • History of parotitis • Supportive measures – analgesia, bed rest • Steroids? Tunical incision If bilateral, mumps orchitis post-puberty may lead to atrophy and subfertility 48 The Royal Marsden Epididymal cysts and hydroceles 49 The Royal Marsden Aetiology Hydrocoele -Excess fluid production Inflammation Tumours -Decreased fluid absorption Post treatment for varicocoele -Congenital Patent Processus Vaginalis Epididymal Cyst – Possible results from epididymal tube obstruction 50 The Royal Marsden Clinical Appearance 51 The Royal Marsden Epididymal Cyst 52 The Royal Marsden Management Epididymal Cyst – Conservative - Why not to operate: – Pain does not improve – Pain can be made worse – Recurrence – Epididymal obstruction Hydrocoele – Conservative – Aspiration – Aspiration + Sclerotherapy 53 The Royal Marsden Inguino-scrotal Hernia 54 The Royal Marsden Take Home Messages − Scrotal Lumps and Bumps can be difficult to confidently diagnose − Always get an Ultrasound (urgent vs. routine) − If in doubt 2WW referral − Elements of managing new testicular cancer patient − Benign scrotal pathology can generally be managed conservatively − Except torsion