Significance of Salvage Lymphadenectomy in the Therapeutical Concept of Advanced Nonseminomatous Germ Cell Tumors

Abstract
A retrospective study reports 65 patients with metastatic disease from nonseminomatous germ cell testicular tumours who underwent a salvage lymphadenectomy either to remove a residual mass or to confirm a complete clinical response after polychemotherapy. Scarring was found in 23 patients (35%), differentiated teratoma in 25 patients (39%) and residual cancer in 17 patients (26%). Of the 12 patients staged as complete responders 2 were found to have cancer, 4 teratoma and 6 fibrosis. Neither tumor markers nor CT scan could accurately predict which patients with residual masses would have cancer, mature teratoma or necrosis. Thus needle biopsy or limited resection is inadequate in its ability to detect persistent vital tumor. After a follow-up of 10-106 months 49 patients (75%) are living with no evidence of disease. 12 patients (19%) died of tumor progress. The most critical prognostic determinant was the nature of the tissue resected. 21 (91%) oof 23 patients with only fibrous or necrotic elements are living with no evidence of disease. However, of 17 patients with persistent cancer in the resected tissue only 8 patients (47%) fared well. Our experience confirms the original concept which called for postchemotherapeutic tumor surgery in all patients who demonstrated either a partial or complete clinical response.