Harding M J, Brown I L, MacPherson S G, Turner M A, Kaye S B
Department of Medical Oncology, University of Glasgow, U.K.
Eur J Cancer Clin Oncol. 1989 Dec;25(12):1689-94. doi: 10.1016/0277-5379(89)90336-2.
Between January 1980 and June 1987, 42 patients receiving platinum based combination chemotherapy for advanced non-seminomatous germ cell tumours had residual masses, detected by computed tomography, after four or six treatment courses without tumour marker evidence of active disease. Resection of retroperitoneal (n = 32), pulmonary (n = 4) or thoracoabdominal (n = 2) disease revealed residual malignancy in nine patients (21%), differentiated teratoma in 14 (33%) and fibrosis or necrosis in 15 (36%). Laparotomy showed no evidence of a mass in four instances. Of the 42 patients, 14 had malignant teratoma undifferentiated in the primary tumour only one of whom (7%) had evidence of malignancy in the specimen resected post-chemotherapy. Conversely, six of 15 patients (40%) whose primary tumour was malignant teratoma intermediate had residual malignant tissue after treatment. With a median follow up of 36 months from post-chemotherapy surgery, 36 patients (86%) are continuously disease-free. Relapses occurred in one of nine patients with residual malignancy (11%), three of 14 with differentiated teratoma (21%), one of 15 with necrosis or fibrosis (7%) and in one patient who had a normal laparotomy. Four patients have died from their tumours, but two are currently disease-free following further surgery and chemotherapy for relapse. Neither primary nor post-chemotherapy histology was predictive of relapse, and although relapse was numerically more common in patients whose residual mass was incompletely excised (three of 12), this was not statistically significant.