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Signs and symptoms of testicular cancer
In most testicular cancer cases, men have a lump on a testicle
or they may notice the testicle is swollen or larger. Sometimes the
lump causes pain, but most of the time it is not painful. Men with
testicular cancer may mention a feeling of heaviness or aching in the
lower abdomen or scrotum.
In rare cases, men with germ cell cancer notice their breasts
are sore or have grown. This symptom occurs because certain types of
germ cell tumors secrete high levels of a hormone called human
chorionic gonadotropin (HCG), which stimulates breast development.
Blood tests can measure HCG levels. These tests are important in
diagnosis, staging, and follow-up of some testicular cancers.
Like germ cell tumors, Leydig cell tumors and Sertoli cell
tumors can also cause a lump in the testicle. Leydig cell tumors can
produce androgens (male sex hormones) or estrogens (female sex
hormones). These hormones may cause symptoms that provide clues to the
correct diagnosis. Breast growth or loss of sexual desire is a symptom
of estrogen-producing tumors. Androgen-producing tumors may not cause
any specific symptoms in men, but in boys they can cause growth of
facial and body hair at an abnormally early age.
Even when testicular cancer has spread to other organs, only
about 1 man in 4 may have symptoms. Lower back pain can be a sign that
the cancer has spread to the lymph nodes in the abdomen. If the cancer
has spread to the lungs, the man may notice trouble breathing
(shortness of breath), chest pain, or a cough. Sometimes the man may
even cough up blood. Occasionally men will have abdominal pain, either
from enlarged lymph nodes or metastasis (spread) to the liver. In rare
cases, testicular cancer spreads to the brain and can cause headaches.
Some men with testicular cancer have no symptoms at all, and
their cancer is found during medical testing for other conditions.
Sometimes imaging tests done to find the cause of infertility can
uncover a small testicular cancer.
A number of non-cancerous conditions, such as testicle injury
or inflammation, can produce symptoms similar to those of testicular
cancer. Inflammation of the testicle, known as orchitis, can cause
painful swelling. Epididymitis (inflammation of the epididymis) can
also cause swelling and pain. Both of these can be caused by viral or
bacterial infections. The mumps virus causes orchitis in about 1 man in
5 who contracts mumps as an adult.
If you have any of the signs or symptoms described above, see
your doctor without delay. Many of these symptoms are more likely to be
caused by something other than testicular cancer. But if a tumor is the
cause, the sooner you get an accurate diagnosis, the sooner you can
start treatment and the more effective your treatment is likely to be.
For more information, see the separate American Cancer Society
document, Do I Have Testicular Cancer?
Medical history and physical exam
If you have signs or symptoms that may suggest testicular
cancer, your doctor will want to take a complete medical history to
check for risk factors and symptoms. During a physical exam, the doctor
will feel the testicles for swelling or tenderness and for the size and
location of any lumps. The doctor will also examine your abdomen, lymph
nodes, and other parts of your body carefully, looking for any signs
the tumor has spread. Often the results of the exam are normal aside
from the testicular abnormalities.
Ultrasound of the testicles
An ultrasound can help doctors tell if a lump is solid or
filled with fluid. This test uses sound waves to produce images of
internal organs. A transducer (wand-like instrument) emits the sound
waves and picks up the echoes as they bounce off the organs. A computer
processes the pattern of echoes to produce an image on a monitor. The
echoes from most tumors differ from those of normal tissues. These
patterns of echoes also can help distinguish some types of benign and
malignant tumors from one another.
This is an easy test to have and it uses no radiation, which
is why it is often used to look at developing fetuses. You simply lie
on your back on a table and a technician moves the transducer along the
skin of the scrotum. Usually, the skin is first lubricated with gel.
The pattern of echoes reflected by tissues can be used to distinguish
certain benign conditions (like hydrocele or varicocele), from a solid
tumor that could be a cancer. If the lump is solid, then it may be a
cancer and the doctor may recommend further tests or even surgery to
remove the tumor.
Blood tests for tumor markers
Some blood tests can help diagnose testicular tumors. Many
testicular cancers secrete high levels of certain proteins, such as
alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) and human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG). When
these proteins (called tumor markers) are in the blood, it suggests
that there is a testicular tumor. A tumor may also increase the levels
of an enzyme called lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). However, LDH levels
can also be increased in conditions other than cancer.
Non-seminomas often raise AFP and/or HCG levels. Pure
seminomas occasionally raise HCG levels but never AFP levels, so any
increase in AFP means that the tumor has a non-seminoma component.
(Tumors can be mixed and have areas of seminoma and non-seminoma.) A
high LDH often (but not always) indicates widespread disease. Sertoli
and Leydig cell tumors do not produce these substances. The levels of
these proteins may not be elevated if the tumor is small.
These tests also sometimes help estimate how much cancer is
present, to evaluate the response to therapy, and to make sure the
tumor has not returned. For more information on tumor markers, see the
section "How
is testicular cancer staged?"
Surgery
If the doctor sees a solid tumor on ultrasound, he or she will
recommend surgery to remove it as soon as possible. The surgeon will
try to remove the entire tumor along with the testicle and spermatic
cord. The spermatic cord contains blood and lymph vessels that may act
as pathways for testicular cancer to spread to the rest of the body. To
lessen the chance that cancer cells will spread, these vessels are tied
off early in the operation. This is best done by operating through an
incision (cut) in the groin. This operation is called a radical
inguinal orchiectomy.
The entire specimen is sent to the lab, where a pathologist (a
doctor specializing in laboratory diagnosis of diseases) examines the
tissue under a microscope. If cancer cells are present, the pathologist
sends back a report describing the type and extent of the cancer.
In rare cases, when a diagnosis of testicular cancer is
uncertain, the doctor may biopsy the testicle before removing it. This
is done in surgery. During this operation, the surgeon makes a cut in
the groin, withdraws the testicle from the scrotum, and examines it
without cutting the spermatic cord. If suspicious tissue is seen, a
portion of the tissue is removed and immediately looked at by the
pathologist. If cancer is found, the testicle and spermatic cord are
removed. If the tissue is not cancerous, the testicle can often be
returned to the scrotum, and treatment will be surgery to remove only
the tumor or the use of appropriate medicines.
If the diagnosis of cancer is made, your doctor will order
other imaging tests to see if it has spread outside of the testicle.
Imaging tests
Chest x-ray
This is a plain x-ray of your chest and can be taken in any
outpatient setting. This test is done to see if your cancer has spread
to your lungs or the lymph nodes in the middle area of the chest known
as the mediastinum. If the x-ray result is normal, you probably don't
have cancer in your lungs. But most doctors feel a computed tomography
(CT) scan can better judge whether the cancer has spread to the chest.
Computed tomography (CT) scan
The CT scan is an x-ray procedure that produces detailed
cross-sectional images of your body. Instead of taking one picture,
like a conventional x-ray, a CT scanner takes many pictures of the part
of your body being studied as it rotates around you. A computer then
combines these pictures into an image of a slice of your body.
CT scans are helpful in staging the cancer. They can help tell
if your cancer has spread into your lymph nodes, lungs, liver, or other
organs.
Before the scan, you may be asked to drink a contrast solution
and/or get an intravenous (IV) injection of a contrast dye that helps
better outline abnormal areas in the body. You may need an IV line
through which the contrast dye is injected.
The injection can cause some flushing (redness and warm
feeling that may last hours to days). A few people are allergic to the
dye and get hives. Rarely, more serious reactions like trouble
breathing and low blood pressure can occur. Medicine can be given to
prevent and treat allergic reactions. Be sure to tell the doctor if you
have ever reacted to any contrast material used for x-rays or if you
have an allergy to shellfish.
You need to lie still on a table while the scan is being done.
During the test, the table moves in and out of the scanner, a
ring-shaped machine that completely surrounds the table. You might feel
a bit confined by the ring you have to lie in while the pictures are
being taken.
CT scans are sometimes used to guide a biopsy needle precisely
into a suspected metastasis. For this procedure, called a CT-guided
needle biopsy, you remain on the CT scanning table while a radiologist
advances a biopsy needle through the skin toward the location of the
mass. CT scans are repeated until the doctors are confident that the
needle is within the mass. A fine needle biopsy sample (tiny fragment
of tissue) or a core needle biopsy sample (a thin cylinder of tissue)
is removed and examined under a microscope.
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan
Like CT scans, MRI scans provide detailed images of soft
tissues in the body. But MRI scans use radio waves and strong magnets
instead of x-rays. The energy from the radio waves is absorbed and then
released in a pattern formed by the type of tissue and by certain
diseases. A computer translates the pattern of radio waves given off by
the tissues into a very detailed image of parts of the body. A contrast
material might be injected just as with CT scans but is used less
often.
MRI scans are particularly helpful in examining the brain and
spinal cord.
MRI scans are a little more uncomfortable than CT scans.
First, they take longer -- often up to an hour. You may be placed
inside a large cylindrical tube, which is confining and can upset
people with a fear of enclosed spaces. Newer, more open MRI machines
can help with this if needed. The MRI machine makes buzzing and
clicking noises that you may find disturbing. Some places will provide
earplugs to help block this out.
Lymphangiogram
Because of improvements in other imaging tests,
lymphangiograms are rarely done today. Most doctors prefer CT scans
instead.
For a lymphangiogram, a special dye is injected into a lymph
vessel in the foot or leg. The dye travels to the lymph nodes. A
special monitor displays x-ray images of the lymph system, which
doctors can study to detect signs that cancer has spread to the lymph
nodes.
CT scans are used to examine lymph nodes more frequently than
lymphangiograms. However, the technique is sometimes used for patients
with early-stage non-seminomas who are being watched for signs of
progression before getting more chemotherapy or radiation.
Positron emission tomography (PET) scan
For a PET scan, radioactive glucose (sugar) is injected into
the patient's vein. The amount of radioactivity is very low. Because
cancers use sugar much faster than normal tissues, the cancer cells in
the body absorb large amounts of the radioactive substance. A special
camera can then be used to create a picture of areas of radioactivity
in the body. The picture is not finely detailed like a CT or MRI scan,
but it can provide helpful information about your whole body.
This test can be helpful for spotting small collections of
cancer cells. It is sometimes useful for looking at enlarged lymph
nodes that remain after chemotherapy. A PET scan may help the doctor
decide if they contain scar tissue or active tumor. Often the PET scan
is combined with a CT scan. This helps decide if abnormalities seen on
the CT scan are cancer or something else.
Last Medical Review: 08/03/2009 Last Revised: 08/03/2009
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