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Testicular Tumors: What Radiologists Need to Know—Differential Diagnosis, Staging, and Management

Authors :
Pardeep Mittal
William C. Small
Courtney C. Moreno
Matthew S. Hartman
Juan C. Camacho
Nima Kokabi
Viraj A. Master
Melinda M. Lewis
Source :
RadioGraphics. 35:400-415
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Radiological Society of North America (RSNA), 2015.

Abstract

Cryptorchidism, family history, and infertility are risk factors for testicular cancer. Most testicular cancers occur in young men aged 18-35 years, and seminoma is the most common cell type. Testicular tumors are usually diagnosed at ultrasonography (US) and are staged at computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. At US, testicular tumors usually appear as a solid intratesticular mass. Because the differential diagnosis includes infarct and infection, correlation with patient history and symptoms is important. At staging CT or MR imaging, retroperitoneal lymph nodes are considered regional lymph nodes, and the greatest nodal diameter is used to distinguish among N1-N3 disease. The right testicular vein drains into the inferior vena cava, and the left testicular vein drains into the left renal vein. Because of venous and lymphatic drainage pathways, retroperitoneal lymph nodes are the initial landing station for testicular cancers. Enlarged lymph nodes in the supraclavicular region, chest, and pelvis are considered distant metastases. Testicular cancer is initially treated with orchiectomy. The patient may then undergo active surveillance, chemotherapy, radiation therapy, or retroperitoneal lymph node resection, depending primarily on the clinical stage. Radiologists play an important role in initial diagnosis, staging, and imaging surveillance of testicular malignancies.

Details

ISSN :
15271323 and 02715333
Volume :
35
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
RadioGraphics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f47fc8facc46f81556238f9b8f0653f0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1148/rg.352140097