1. Re: Testis-Sparing Surgery: Experience in 13 Patients with Oncologic and Functional Outcomes
- Author
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Ozer Ural Cakici, M.E. Arslan, D. Kamaci, Murat Keske, Ali Fuat Atmaca, Mevlana Derya Balbay, Abdullah Erdem Canda, Canda, Abdullah Erdem (ORCID 0000-0002-5196-653X & YÖK ID 116202), Balbay, Mevlana Derya ( ORCID 0000-0001-9706-1587 & YÖK ID 153320), Keske, Murat, Atmaca, Ali Fuat, Çakıcı, Özer Ural, Arslan, Muhammed Ersagun, Kamacı, Davut, School of Medicine, and Department of Urology
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Small testicular masses ,Germ-cell tumors ,Benign ,Lesions ,Cancer ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Medicine ,Urology and nephrology ,Urology ,Testis sparing surgery ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Leydig cell tumour ,Lesion ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Text mining ,medicine ,Pathological ,Original Research ,Frozen section procedure ,business.industry ,Seminoma ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Radiation therapy ,Erectile dysfunction ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,medicine.symptom ,Sexual function ,business - Abstract
Introduction: we present oncological and functional outcomes of patients who underwent testis-sparing surgery (TSS). Methods: overall, 13 patients were included. Mean patient age was 29.9 +/- 12.5 years. In five patients, TSS was performed for sequential bilateral testicular tumours. One patient underwent concurrent left radical orchiectomy and right TSS. In eight patients with normal contralateral testis, seven underwent left and one underwent right TSS. Results: mean pathological tumour size was 14.6 +/- 12.5 mm. lntraoperative frozen section evaluation of the mass was performed in eight patients that revealed benign lesions. No intraoperative tumour bed biopsies were taken in this patient group. Regarding the remaining five patients, intraoperative tumour bed biopsies were taken and testicular intraepithelial neoplasia (TIN) was reported in two (40%) patients; no local testicular radiotherapy was given postoperatively. Tumour pathology was malignant in all but one lesion, including Leydig cell tumour (n=1), seminoma(n=2), embryonal carcinoma (n=1), and adenomatoid tumour (n=1). During 47.2 +/- 22.5 months of followup, local recurrence was detected in one patient who underwent radical orchiectomy. No additional local recurrence or systemic metastasis was identified in other patients with malignant lesions. For patients with malignant tumours, of the three patients with a normal preoperative testosterone levels, testosterone level was normal in one patient (with no erectile dysfunction [ED]) and was decreased in two patients (with ED) following TSS. No ED was reported in the nine patients with benign lesions. Conclusions: in carefully selected cases, TSS appears to be a safe, feasible procedure with adequate cancer control that could preserve sexual function., NA
- Published
- 2019