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Title: Vascular invasion as a prognosticator of metastatic disease in nonseminomatous germ cell tumors of the testis. Importance in "surveillance only" protocols. Author: Moriyama N, Daly JJ, Keating MA, Lin CW, Prout GR. Journal: Cancer; 1985 Nov 15; 56(10):2492-8. PubMed ID: 2412688. Abstract: Forty-five nonseminomatous germ cell carcinomas of the testis were evaluated retrospectively to define the biologic features associated with the occurrence of metastatic disease. A statistical analysis of several pertinent clinical and pathologic factors was performed. The factors evaluated included: duration of symptoms before diagnosis, serum level of alpha-fetoprotein, serum or urinary level of human chorionic gonadotropin, testicular weight, extent of local tumor (pathologic T stage), and vascular invasion at the primary site. In each case, metastases were documented by a retroperitoneal node dissection, other biopsies, or by chest films. In 29 tumors with vascular invasion, 25 patients were seen with metastatic disease. In 16 tumors without vascular invasion, 3 patients demonstrated metastasis. The presence or absence of vascular invasion was strongly correlated with concomitant lymph node involvement or subsequent appearance of other metastatic disease (chi-square = 17.19). Additionally, vascular invasion in bifactoral++ analysis with tumor size and pathologic T stage proved a significant prognosticator even in low-staged (chi-square = 8.48) and small tumors (chi-square = 8.13). The implications of these findings, both as an adjunct to the staging of nonseminomatous germ cell tumors and in the management of clinical Stage I lesions, are discussed.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]