Background: There is controversy regarding the management of patients with normal markers and residual masses (≤1 cm) after chemotherapy for nonseminomatous germ cell tumors (NSGCTs).
Objective: To determine long-term outcomes of a surveillance strategy in such patients.
Design, setting, and participants: A retrospective review of our multidisciplinary testicular cancer database was performed. All patients who underwent primary chemotherapy for metastatic NSGCTs were identified between 1981 and 2016. A complete response (CR) was defined as normalization of serum tumor markers and a ≤1 cm residual mass in the largest axial dimension following chemotherapy. All such patients were surveilled.
Outcome measurements and statistical analysis: Outcome variables of interest were time to death, time to cancer-specific survival, and time to relapse. Overall survival and relapse-free survival were calculated using the Kaplan-Meier method, and the cumulative incidence of cause-specific survival rates was calculated using competing risk analysis. The impact of risk group and chemotherapy regimen on relapse-free survival was assessed using log-rank test.
Results and limitations: During the study period, 1429 metastatic germ cell tumor patients were treated with primary chemotherapy. CR was achieved in 191 (18.5%) NSGCT patients. The median age at diagnosis was 27.4 yr, with a median follow-up of 81.1 mo. The majority had American Joint Committee on Cancer stage II at diagnosis (I: 23.8%; II: 49.2%; III: 27%) and International Germ Cell Cancer Collaborative Group good-risk disease (good: 78%; intermediate: 17.8%; poor: 4.2%). Of the 191 patients with a CR, 175 (91.6%) never relapsed and remain disease free. Sixteen (8.4%) patients relapsed after a median of 11.3 mo (range 1-332 mo), with over half (nine patients; 4.7%) relapsing in the retroperitoneum only and salvaged successfully with postchemotherapy retroperitoneal lymph node dissection (PC-RPLND) alone. Of these nine patients, only two (1%) had viable disease in the PC-RPLND specimen. The remaining seven patients had relapses outside the retroperitoneum and received salvage chemotherapy ± postchemotherapy resection. Overall, nine (4.7%) patients have died, but only four (2.1%) from testis cancer.
Conclusions: Our data, the largest series to date, confirm that surveillance is safe and effective for men who achieve a CR following chemotherapy for metastatic NSGCTs.
Patient summary: Surveillance is a safe strategy for patients who achieve a complete response following chemotherapy for metastatic testis cancer.
Keywords: Relapse; Retroperitoneal lymph node dissection; Surveillance; Survival; Testis neoplasm.
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