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e-Article

A case of prostatic metastasis from non‐seminomatous testicular cancer
Document Type
article
Source
IJU Case Reports, Vol 6, Iss 5, Pp 274-277 (2023)
Subject
metastatic testicular cancer
non‐seminomatous testicular cancer
prostatic metastasis
testicular cancer
urinary retention
Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology
RC870-923
Language
English
ISSN
2577-171X
Abstract
Introduction Prostatic metastasis from testicular cancer is extremely rare, with only 10 reported cases, all of which were diagnosed as relapse. Herein, we report the case of a patient with concurrent testicular cancer and prostatic metastasis. Case presentation A 57‐year‐old man presented at our emergency department with urinary retention. A painless mass was found in the right scrotum, and computed tomography showed lung, mediastinal, and liver metastases, and an enlarged prostate. Tumor markers were measured in 2057 U/L lactate dehydrogenase, 2460 mIU/mL human chorionic gonadotrophin, 1303 ng/mL alpha‐fetoprotein, and 1.51 ng/mL prostate specific antigen. An orchiectomy and biopsy were performed; the pathological results showed immature teratomas, embryonal carcinomas, choriocarcinomas, and seminomas in the testis, and embryonal carcinomas in the prostate, liver, and mediastinum. The patient refused chemotherapy and died 3 months following diagnosis. Conclusion Prostatic metastasis should be considered in cases of dysuria or prostate enlargement in testicular cancers.