Abstract
The prognosis of intracranial germinoma producing the human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) is controversial due to limited information. We undertook a retrospective analysis to determine whether this type of tumor has similar clinical course and prognosis to hCG non-secreting germinoma. Thirty-one histologically confirmed intracranial germinoma patients who had pretreatment hCG examination in serum/CSF were treated with radiotherapy between 1980 and 1996. hCG level was measured by immunoradioassay of beta subunit of hCG. Six patients had elevated serum hCG levels and were defined as having hCG secreting germinoma. All except three patients received craniospinal axis irradiation. The follow-up ranged from 19-175 months with a median of 63 months. hCG secreting germinoma accounted for 19% of intracranial germinoma cases. Elevated hCG levels ranged from 39-260 IU/l in serum. No difference was found between hCG non-secreting germinoma and hCG secreting germinoma in terms of patient or treatment characteristics. There was no recurrence among the six hCG secreting germinoma patients. The 5-year overall and disease-free survival rates were 96% for patients with hCG non-secreting germinomas and 100% for the patients with hCG secreting germinomas. The survival difference was not significant (p = 0.59). Our results suggest that elevated level of hCG did not result in any differences in the clinical characteristics or survival after radical radiotherapy in histologically confirmed intracranial germinoma.

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