Combination chemotherapy with bleomycin, etoposide and cisplatin (BEP) for metastatic testicular teratoma: Long-term follow-up

1991 
Abstract 127 men with previously untreated non-seminomatous germ cell tumours (NSGCT) of the testis were given BEP chemotherapy (bleomycin, etoposide and cisplatin) between 1979–1986. Long-term follow-up (median 65 months) has shown an overall 5 year survival of 87.2% (95% confidence limits 81.1%–93.3%). Outcome was related to both tumour volume and serum marker levels of alpha-fetoprotein (αFP) and beta human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG), with 5 year actuarial survivals of 97.8%, 72.2% and 26.7% respectively for small, large and very large volume disease defined by Medical Research Council criteria, and 91.2% and 60.8%, respectively, for men with low (αFP≤500 kU/l and HCG≤1000iU/l) or high serum marker levels. 79 men (62%) had a complete radiological and serum marker response to chemotherapy alone; residual masses postchemotherapy were resected in 39 patients (31%), showing undifferentiated tumour in only 6 (15%). 23 of the 127 patients (18%) failed to respond or developed recurrent disease after BEP; only 5 were successfully salvaged. Myelotoxicity of treatment was mild with grade 4 toxicity in 2% of chemotherapy courses and 3 episodes of neutropenic sepsis. Mean glomerular filtration rates fell by 15.6% between courses 1 and 4 of BEP. Bleomycin pneumonitis developed in 13% of cases with 1 fatality. So far 21 men have had children following chemotherapy, but semen analysis 12 months or more (median 36 months) after treatment showed azoospermia in 11 out of 54 (20%) men tested. BEP chemotherapy can be regarded as standard treatment for patients with metastatic NSGCT in low-risk categories, but more intensive therapy is required for advanced presentations. Strategies to develop “risk related” treatment are under investigation.
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