The Significance of Spermatic Cord Involvement by Testicular Germ Cell Tumors: Should We Be Staging Discontinuous Invasion From Involved Lymphovascular Spaces Differently From Direct Extension?

The recent 8th edition of the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) staging manual had multiple changes concerning how pathologists should stage germ cell tumors (GCTs) of the testis. A significant one concerns the impact of different types of spermatic cord involvement, specifically direct tumor extension versus discontinuous involvement by invasion through lymphovascular spaces. We compared clinicopathologic findings and outcome data between 2 cohorts with these findings to evaluate the validity of the change in the AJCC 8th edition manual. GCTs (seminomatous and nonseminomatous) of the testis were identified that had previously been staged as pT3 due to involvement of the spermatic cord. Pathologic, radiographic, and clinical findings were reviewed. Tumors were restaged based on AJCC 8th edition criteria and the cohorts were split into direct extension by tumor into the spermatic cord (pT3), spermatic cord soft tissue invasion via spread from discontinuously involved lymphovascular spaces (pT2pM1), or a combination of both (pT3pM1). One hundred cases of primary GCTs of the testis, previously classified as pT3 by the AJCC 6th or 7th cancer staging manuals from 2007 to 2015, were selected. Mixed malignant GCTs were the predominant tumor type, comprising 66% of all cases. Pure tumor morphologies included embryonal carcinoma (n=17), seminoma (n=14), teratoma (n=2), and yolk sac tumor (n=1). The tumors either directly invaded into the spermatic cord (n=78), involved the cor...
Source: The American Journal of Surgical Pathology - Category: Pathology Tags: Original Articles Source Type: research