Asian Journal of Urology (Jul 2020)

Mesenteric metastases from mature teratoma of the testis: A case report

  • Zoe Loh,
  • Todd G. Manning,
  • Jonathan S. O'Brien,
  • Marlon Perera,
  • Nathan Lawrentschuk

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 3
pp. 322 – 325

Abstract

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Metastatic spread of testicular cancer has been well documented, with 95% of cases involving para-aortic retroperitoneal lymph nodes. Mesenteric lymphatic basins do not lie within the canonical drainage pathway of the testes and represent a rare site of metastasis. Various mechanisms of spread to the mesentery have been described, including direct extension and haematogenous dissemination. We present a case of a previously-well 43-year-old man who presented with right scrotal discomfort and intermittent lower back pain, who was found to have mesenteric metastases from a non-seminomatous germ cell tumour of the testis. Managing lymphadenopathy that lies outside of standard resection templates remains a complex surgical challenge. Here we present the first case in the English medical literature with co-existing supradiaphragmatic axillary and mediastinal nodal disease.

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