PRIMITIVE NEUROECTODERMAL TUMORS ARISING IN TESTICULAR GERM-CELL NEOPLASMS

Citation
H. Michael et al., PRIMITIVE NEUROECTODERMAL TUMORS ARISING IN TESTICULAR GERM-CELL NEOPLASMS, The American journal of surgical pathology, 21(8), 1997, pp. 896-904
Citations number
23
Categorie Soggetti
Pathology,Surgery
ISSN journal
01475185
Volume
21
Issue
8
Year of publication
1997
Pages
896 - 904
Database
ISI
SICI code
0147-5185(1997)21:8<896:PNTAIT>2.0.ZU;2-R
Abstract
Twenty-nine young men (mean age 29 years) had primitive neuroectoderma l tumors (PNETs) arising in germ cell tumors (GCTs). Nine patients had PNETs confined to the testis, eight patients had PNETs in the testis and at metastatic sites, and 12 patients had PNETs identified only at extratesticular sites. Immunohistochemistry was of use in the further classification of these PNETs as neuroblastoma, medulloepithelioma, pe ripheral neuroepithelioma, or ependymoblastoma. The histologic pattern of PNETs in the testis (neuroblastoma or medulloepithelioma) did not predict which tumors metastasized. PNETs localized to the testis did n ot affect prognosis. Eight patients with no PNETs outside the testis w ere free of disease 1 month to 10 years after diagnosis. PNETs in extr atesticular sites were an adverse prognostic factor. Nineteen patients with extratesticular PNETs had adequate clinical follow-up. Thirteen are dead of disease from 4 months to 5 1/2 years (mean 26 months) afte r diagnosis, four are alive with disease 6 months to 2 years after dia gnosis, and two have no evidence of disease with short follow-up (6 an d 17 months). Mean survival was longer (34 months) for patients whose extratesticular PNET was neuroblastoma than for those with other types of PNETs (13 months). Chemotherapy directed against GCTs was not effe ctive in patients who developed metastatic PNETs of GCT origin. We con clude that extratesticular PNETs in patients with testicular GCTs are usually fatal, but patients with neuroblastomatous metastases may have a more prolonged course.