Background: Retroperitoneal lymph node dissection (RPLND) following induction chemotherapy has been considered a critical component in the comprehensive management of advanced non-seminomatous germ cell tumors (NSGCT). The objectives of the present study were to review the clinical outcome of patients who underwent RPLND and to evaluate the probability of necrosis alone, based on some readily available clinical data for these patients.
Methods: Forty-seven consecutive patients with NSGCT were treated with first-line chemotherapy at our institution between January 1993 and September 2002. Twenty-four of these patients, who underwent RPLND with normal values of tumor markers after induction chemotherapy, were included in the study. The cause-specific survival rate was calculated using the Kaplan-Meier method. Various predictive factors for the histology were analyzed using multivariate analysis.
Results: The pathological findings at resection were necrosis alone in 62.5% of cases, teratoma in 25.0%, and viable cancer in 12.5%. The cause-specific 3-year survival rate of patients who underwent complete and incomplete resection was 100% and 50.0%, respectively. Among several clinical factors, prechemotherapy tumor size less than 50 mm was found to be an independent predictor of necrosis alone (hazard ratio = 4.45, P= 0.04).
Conclusion: Metastatic tumor size before chemotherapy appears to be one of the most important factors for the prediction of necrosis alone in the resected specimens of RPLND. The prognosis of patients might be influenced by the degree to which resection has been completed.