Frontiers in Neurology (Jan 2018)

Metastatic “Burned Out” Seminoma Causing Neurological Paraneoplastic Syndrome—Not Quite “Burned Out”

  • Yuval Freifeld,
  • Payal Kapur,
  • Ritika Chitkara,
  • Francesca Lee,
  • Pravin Khemani,
  • Aditya Bagrodia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2018.00020
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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A 44-year-old man presented with cerebellar ataxia and limbic encephalitis and was ultimately diagnosed with metastatic germ cell neoplasm resulting from a “burned out” primary testicular tumor. The patient had progressive ataxia, leading to a thorough investigation for infectious, autoimmune, metabolic, and malignant causes of acquired cerebellar ataxia that revealed no significant findings. Testicular sonography demonstrated a possible right testicular lesion that was not confirmed on radical inguinal orchiectomy. F18-FDG positron emission tomography/computerized tomography scan revealed a solitary retroperitoneal lesion, concerning for metastatic disease but not amenable to percutaneous biopsy. A robotic retroperitoneal lymph node dissection was performed and pathology revealed a CD117-positive metastatic seminoma leading to appropriate germ cell tumor-directed chemotherapy. After completing chemotherapy and during 1 year of follow-up, there has been a gradual improvement of the patient’s neurological manifestations.

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