Chemotherapy and radiotherapy in advanced testicular non-seminoma

1984 
Summary Between 1976 and 1981, 63 patients with Stage II–IV testicular non-seminoma were treated by chemotherapy followed 4–6 weeks later by involved field radiotherapy. Of this group, 58 (92.1%) are alive and tumour-free, one patient died post-operatively and four of uncontrolled disease. There were no deaths from drug-induced neutropenic sepsis. During the same period a second group of 53 patients who had received radiotherapy were given chemotherapy for recurrent disease. Of this group, 38 (71.7%) are alive and tumour-free, eight died of uncontrolled malignancy, six from drug-related complications and one from a myocardial infarct. In patients receiving elective post-chemotherapy irradiation, tumour volume exerted little influence on treatment outcome, the disease-free survival rates for small volume and bulky disease being 100% and 87.2%, respectively. Conversely, in patients receiving chemotherapy after prior irradiation there was a significant difference; 96.7% and 43.4%, respectively ( p Despite the excellent survival figures for patients receiving post-chemotherapy irradiation the value of this approach cannot be assumed, although the slight difference between small and bulky presentations suggests that radiotherapy may have contributed to the therapeutic result.
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