Cervical metastasis of germ cell tumors: evaluation, management, complications, and outcomes.
Publication/Presentation Date
2-1-2012
Abstract
OBJECTIVES/HYPOTHESIS: Head and neck surgeons can be involved in the management of germ cell tumor (GCT) metastatic to the neck from initial diagnosis through postchemotherapy management of residual neck masses. This article reports on 34 consecutive patients with GCT metastatic to the neck.
STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective chart review.
METHODS: A single-institution retrospective chart review of 34 consecutive patients with GCT metastatic to the neck who underwent postchemotherapy neck surgery between 1991 and 2009 was performed.
RESULTS: Seventy-four percent of patients had a neck mass at initial diagnosis, with 50% of patients having a neck mass as the presenting symptom leading to a diagnosis of GCT. Of the 37 neck procedures, positive nodes were found in 22. No significant relationship between preoperative tumor markers and neck pathology (P = .35) was identified. No patients had neck recurrence. No patients had permanent nerve injury or chyle leak. As a secondary end point, survival analysis related to cervical pathology showed that viable tumor in the neck predicted disease-specific survival (P = .01). Five- and 10-year disease-specific survival was 82.3% (median, 52-month follow-up).
CONCLUSIONS: Operative management for patients with metastatic GCT to the neck can achieve long-term durable cervical control with limited complications.
Volume
122
Issue
2
First Page
286
Last Page
290
ISSN
1531-4995
Published In/Presented At
Mehra, S., Liu, J., Gupta, A., Sheinfeld, J., & Kraus, D. (2012). Cervical metastasis of germ cell tumors: evaluation, management, complications, and outcomes. The Laryngoscope, 122(2), 286–290. https://doi.org/10.1002/lary.22422
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
22252920
Department(s)
Department of Surgery
Document Type
Article