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      Low-volume nodal metastases detected at retroperitoneal lymphadenectomy for testicular cancer: pattern and prognostic factors for relapse.

      Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology
      Actuarial Analysis, Adolescent, Adult, Antineoplastic Agents, administration & dosage, Chemotherapy, Adjuvant, Disease-Free Survival, Germinoma, drug therapy, mortality, pathology, Humans, Lymph Node Excision, methods, Lymphatic Metastasis, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local, epidemiology, prevention & control, Patient Selection, Prognosis, Proportional Hazards Models, Retroperitoneal Space, Risk, Testicular Neoplasms, United States

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          Abstract

          To determine the incidence, pattern, and predictive factors for relapse in patients with low-volume nodal metastases (stage pN1) at retroperitoneal lymphadenectomy (RPLND) and identify who may benefit from chemotherapy in the adjuvant or primary setting. Fifty-four patients with testicular nonseminomatous germ cell tumor had low-volume retroperitoneal metastases (pathologic stage pN1, 1997 tumor-node-metastasis classification) resected at RPLND, 50 of whom were managed expectantly without adjuvant chemotherapy. The dissection was bilateral in 12 and was a modified template in 38 patients. Retroperitoneal metastases were limited to microscopic nodal involvement in 14 patients. Follow-up ranged from 1 to 106 months (median, 31.4 months). Eleven patients (22%) suffered a relapse at a median follow-up of 1.8 months (range, 0.6 to 28 months). The most frequent form of recurrence was marker elevation in nine (18%) patients. Persistent marker elevation after orchiectomy and before retroperitoneal lymphadenectomy was a significant independent predictor of relapse (relative risk, 8.0; 95% confidence interval, 2.3 to 27.8; P =.001). Four of five (80%) patients with elevated markers (alpha-fetoprotein alone in three, alpha-fetoprotein and beta human chorionic gonadotropin in one) suffered a relapse, compared with seven of 45 (15.6%) patients with normal markers. Clinical stage I and IIA patients with normal markers who have low-volume nodal metastases have a low incidence of relapse and can be managed by observation only if compliance can be assured. In contrast, patients with elevated markers before retroperitoneal lymphadenectomy have a high rate of relapse and should be considered for primary chemotherapy.

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