Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Surveillance vs. adjuvant therapy of clinical stage I testicular tumors - a review and the SWENOTECA experience

Cohn-Cedermark, G. ; Ståhl, Olof LU and Tandstad, T. (2015) In Andrology 3(1). p.102-110
Abstract
Although clinical stage I (CS I) testicular cancer is highly curable, the optimal management is controversial. The aims of the Swedish and Norwegian Testicular Cancer Group (SWENOTECA) studies for CS I non-seminoma (NS) and seminoma (S) have been to reduce treatment intensity while maintaining high survival rates, reduce the number of patients needing salvage treatment and implement patient autonomy with regard to adjuvant treatment. During 1998-2010 NS CSI patients with lymphovascular invasion (LVI) of the primary tumor (high risk) were recommended bleomycin, etoposide, cisplatin (BEP)x1. During 2000-2006 S CS I patients had the option to choose surveillance or adjuvant radiotherapy (AR). In 2004, carboplatinx1 (AUC7) was added as a third... (More)
Although clinical stage I (CS I) testicular cancer is highly curable, the optimal management is controversial. The aims of the Swedish and Norwegian Testicular Cancer Group (SWENOTECA) studies for CS I non-seminoma (NS) and seminoma (S) have been to reduce treatment intensity while maintaining high survival rates, reduce the number of patients needing salvage treatment and implement patient autonomy with regard to adjuvant treatment. During 1998-2010 NS CSI patients with lymphovascular invasion (LVI) of the primary tumor (high risk) were recommended bleomycin, etoposide, cisplatin (BEP)x1. During 2000-2006 S CS I patients had the option to choose surveillance or adjuvant radiotherapy (AR). In 2004, carboplatinx1 (AUC7) was added as a third treatment option. In 2007 a new risk-adapted treatment protocol for S CS I was initiated. Patients with two risk factors (tumor size>4cm, tumor growth in the rete testis) were recommended carboplatinx1 and patients with 0-1 risk factor were recommended surveillance. All patients were provided with oral and written information of possible management options and could choose the other alternative. The relapse rate for NS CS I with BEPx1 was 3.2% for high risk, and 1.6% for low-risk patients. Five-year cause-specific survival was 100%. For S CS I-patients treated before 2007, 14.3% on surveillance relapsed, 3.9% after carboplatin, and 0.8% after AR. Five-year cause-specific survival was 99.9%. For S CS I-patients treated from 2007, a relapse rate <3% was confirmed for patients without risk factors. SWENOTECA considers BEPx1 standard adjuvant treatment in NS CS I high-risk patients. Low-risk patients should have the opportunity to receive BEPx1 following thorough information regarding pros and cons. For S CS I patients without risk factors, adjuvant treatment is not necessary. For patients with risk factors, patient autonomy should be respected. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
chemotherapy, clinical stage I, radiotherapy, testis cancer
in
Andrology
volume
3
issue
1
pages
102 - 110
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • wos:000350288800014
  • scopus:84923314101
  • pmid:25270123
ISSN
2047-2927
DOI
10.1111/andr.280
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
8c89c8bc-a0da-4dea-a252-bb8766a94d1e (old id 5303973)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 10:46:33
date last changed
2022-04-28 01:17:45
@article{8c89c8bc-a0da-4dea-a252-bb8766a94d1e,
  abstract     = {{Although clinical stage I (CS I) testicular cancer is highly curable, the optimal management is controversial. The aims of the Swedish and Norwegian Testicular Cancer Group (SWENOTECA) studies for CS I non-seminoma (NS) and seminoma (S) have been to reduce treatment intensity while maintaining high survival rates, reduce the number of patients needing salvage treatment and implement patient autonomy with regard to adjuvant treatment. During 1998-2010 NS CSI patients with lymphovascular invasion (LVI) of the primary tumor (high risk) were recommended bleomycin, etoposide, cisplatin (BEP)x1. During 2000-2006 S CS I patients had the option to choose surveillance or adjuvant radiotherapy (AR). In 2004, carboplatinx1 (AUC7) was added as a third treatment option. In 2007 a new risk-adapted treatment protocol for S CS I was initiated. Patients with two risk factors (tumor size&gt;4cm, tumor growth in the rete testis) were recommended carboplatinx1 and patients with 0-1 risk factor were recommended surveillance. All patients were provided with oral and written information of possible management options and could choose the other alternative. The relapse rate for NS CS I with BEPx1 was 3.2% for high risk, and 1.6% for low-risk patients. Five-year cause-specific survival was 100%. For S CS I-patients treated before 2007, 14.3% on surveillance relapsed, 3.9% after carboplatin, and 0.8% after AR. Five-year cause-specific survival was 99.9%. For S CS I-patients treated from 2007, a relapse rate &lt;3% was confirmed for patients without risk factors. SWENOTECA considers BEPx1 standard adjuvant treatment in NS CS I high-risk patients. Low-risk patients should have the opportunity to receive BEPx1 following thorough information regarding pros and cons. For S CS I patients without risk factors, adjuvant treatment is not necessary. For patients with risk factors, patient autonomy should be respected.}},
  author       = {{Cohn-Cedermark, G. and Ståhl, Olof and Tandstad, T.}},
  issn         = {{2047-2927}},
  keywords     = {{chemotherapy; clinical stage I; radiotherapy; testis cancer}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{102--110}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{Andrology}},
  title        = {{Surveillance vs. adjuvant therapy of clinical stage I testicular tumors - a review and the SWENOTECA experience}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/andr.280}},
  doi          = {{10.1111/andr.280}},
  volume       = {{3}},
  year         = {{2015}},
}