The Journal of Urology
Volume 181, Issue 2 , Pages 452-461, February 2009

Cryptorchidism and Testicular Cancer: Separating Fact From Fiction

  • Hadley M. Wood
  • ,
  • Jack S. Elder

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorrespondence: Vattikuti Urology Institute, Henry Ford Hospital, 2799 West Grand Blvd., K-9, Detroit, Michigan 48202 (telephone: 313-916-2626; FAX: 313-916-2956)

Glickman Urological and Kidney Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio, and Vattikuti Urology Institute, Henry Ford Hospital and Children's Hospital of Michigan, Detroit (JSE), Michigan

Received 5 July 2008 published online 15 December 2008.

Purpose

We dissected prevailing assumptions about cryptorchidism and reviewed data that support and reject these assumptions.

Materials and Methods

Five questions about cryptorchidism and the risk of testicular cancer were identified because of their implications in parent counseling and clinical management. Standard search techniques through MEDLINE® were used to identify all relevant English language studies of the questions being examined. Each of the 5 questions was then examined in light of the existing data.

Results

The RR of testicular cancer in a cryptorchidism case is 2.75 to 8. A RR of between 2 and 3 has been noted in patients who undergo orchiopexy by ages 10 to 12 years. Patients who undergo orchiopexy after age 12 years or no orchiopexy are 2 to 6 times as likely to have testicular cancer as those who undergo prepubertal orchiopexy. A contralateral, normally descended testis in a patient with cryptorchidism carries no increased risk of testis cancer. Persistently cryptorchid (inguinal and abdominal) testes are at higher risk for seminoma (74%), while corrected cryptorchid or scrotal testicles that undergo malignant transformation are most likely to become nonseminomatous (63%, p <0.0001), presumably because of a decreased risk of seminoma.

Conclusions

Orchiectomy may be considered in healthy patients with cryptorchidism who are between ages 12 and 50 years. Observation should be recommended in postpubertal males at significant anesthetic risk and all males older than 50 years. While 5% to 15% of scrotal testicular remnants contain germinal tissue, only 1 case of carcinoma in situ has been reported, suggesting that the risk of malignancy in these remnants is extremely low.

Key Words: testis, testicular neoplasms, cryptorchidism, abnormalities, risk

Abbreviations and Acronyms: ASA, American Society of Anesthesiologists, ITGCN, intratubular germ cell neoplasia, UDT, undescended testis

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PII: S0022-5347(08)02779-1

doi:10.1016/j.juro.2008.10.074

The Journal of Urology
Volume 181, Issue 2 , Pages 452-461, February 2009