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From Blazing To Burnt Out: Spontaneous Regression Of A Testicular Germ Cell Tumour

Wijnberg, A. 2023Testicular cancer

Wijnberg, A., Hadden, R., & Freeman, S. (2023). From blazing to burnt out: Spontaneous regression of a testicular germ cell tumour. Ultrasound (Leeds, England), 31(1), 66–70. https://doi.org/10.1177/1742271X221114061

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Abstract

INTRODUCTION: It is a rare, but recognised phenomenon that malignant testicular germ cell tumours can 'burn-out', where the primary lesion spontaneously regresses and presents with no viable remaining malignant cells leaving only a residual 'tumour scar', frequently in the context of distant metastatic disease. CASE REPORT: We present a case report of a patient who underwent serial ultrasound scans documenting regression of a testicular lesion from a malignant appearance to a burned-out lesion, where subsequent resection and histology demonstrated features of a completely regressed seminomatous germ cell tumour with no residual viable tumour cells. DISCUSSION: To the best of our knowledge, there are no previously documented cases where a tumour has been longitudinally followed from sonographic features of concern for malignancy to 'burned-out' appearances. Spontaneous testicular tumour regression has instead been inferred based on the presence of a 'burned-out' testicular lesion in patients presenting with distant metastatic disease. CONCLUSION: This case provides further evidence supporting the concept of spontaneous testicular germ cell tumour regression. Ultrasound practitioners should be aware of this rare phenomenon in men presenting with metastatic germ cell tumour and, additionally, that this condition may present with acute scrotal pain.

Case Details

Disease Location

Testicles

Personal Characteristics

38-year-old male

Clinical Characteristics

Presented to the emergency department with a 6-month history of scrotal swelling with 1day of atraumatic severe scrotal pain which was associated with nausea, vomiting, and fevers. An ultrasound revealed a large, poorly-defined mass within the left testis with heterogeneous echogenicity and low-level but clear internal flow on standard and microflow doppler examination. The patient was seen in urology clinic 9days following presentation. After size reduction, the patient agreed to orchidectomy for definitive histological diagnosis.

Remission Characteristics

He noted that there had been a significant improvement in the pain and, while the testis remained swollen, it had reduced in size and it was no longer firm. Repeat ultrasound 1 month after presentation revealed a significant reduction in the size of the mass, with only minimal internal flow on doppler interrogation. 3 months later, no viable tumour cells were identified

Treatment & Mechanisms

Clinical Treatment

Orchidectomy (after remission)