Surgical removal of the primary tumor in an undescended testis with bulky metastasis is difficult. We believe that initial chemotherapy followed by 1-stage surgical removal of the primary and residual metastasis is a favorable option to improve compliance and decrease the incidence of loss to followup. Atypically altered ilioinguinal metastases may necessitate a change in radiotherapy ports and/or retroperitoneal lymph node dissection boundaries. The significantly poorer survival with nonseminomatous germ cell tumor could be due to the fact that 50% of the lesions were stage IV at presentation. However, multivariate analysis showed only tumor histology to be the significant parameter and not initial stage at presentation.
Surgical removal of the primary tumor in an undescended testis with bulky metastasis is difficult. We believe that initial chemotherapy followed by 1-stage surgical removal of the primary and residual metastasis is a favorable option to improve compliance and decrease the incidence of loss to followup. Atypically altered ilioinguinal metastases may necessitate a change in radiotherapy ports and/or retroperitoneal lymph node dissection boundaries. The significantly poorer survival with nonseminomatous germ cell tumor could be due to the fact that 50% of the lesions were stage IV at presentation. However, multivariate analysis showed only tumor histology to be the significant parameter and not initial stage at presentation.
Multiple synchronous primary malignancies have been reported since the 19th century. A number of proposed theories as to the predisposing factors have been discussed. The criteria to diagnose multiple primary malignancies have been revised by Warren and Gates. We hereby present a case of an asymptomatic individual detected with a synchronous hepatocellular carcinoma and a renal cell carcinoma, its presentation, diagnosis, and the management. The occurrence of synchronous hepatocellular carcinoma with renal cell carcinoma is very rare and only a few cases have been reported. Synchronous extrahepatic primary malignancies have been reported in a few studies across the world though with a varied incidence rate. The occurrence seems to be in the older age group without gender differentiation. The extrahepatic malignancies were more common in cirrhotic livers though the overall survival does not differ between patients with hepatocellular carcinoma alone and hepatocellular carcinoma with synchronous extrahepatic malignancies.
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