Staging and Surgery in Testicular Cancer

Abstract
Both staging and surgery in testicular cancer are thoroughly analysed. Extensive experiences from various authors are reported and compared. The essentials for staging are suggested and a new detailed stage grouping is proposed. The role of surgery in diagnosis, staging and therapy is examined. It is stressed that in non-seminomas, retroperitoneal lymph node dissection is not only a staging procedure, but it may be also a curative operation in several cases of patients with lymph node metastases and a prospective randomized clinical trial is advocated in order to clarify the usefulness of adjunctive chemotherapy in these cases. Surgery is also useful as adjuvant to chemotherapy in several patients with advanced non-seminomas and it is underlined that it should be undertaken early, after only 2 or 3 cycles of chemotherapy, in order to avoid the strong fibrosis that often occurs after long-term chemotherapy and which makes surgical dissection very difficult or even impossible. Lastly, even if extensive, surgery seems to be a safe procedure in these young patients.