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Late toxicity following curative treatment of testicular cancer

✍ Scribed by Christian Kollmannsberger; Markus Kuzcyk; F. Mayer; Jörg T. Hartmann; Lothar Kanz; Carsten Bokemeyer


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
91 KB
Volume
17
Category
Article
ISSN
8756-0437

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✦ Synopsis


Cisplatin appears to be the major cause for long-term toxicity in patients treated for testicular cancer. Long-term side effects consist mainly of nephrotoxicity, ototoxicity, and neurotoxicity as well as gonadal damage. Following standard-dose chemotherapy approximately 20% to 30% of patients will be affected by long-term side effects, although not all these side effects will cause an impaired quality of life. Several strategies have been or currently are being evaluated to reduce acute and long-term complications including the introduction of equally effective, but less toxic regimens, or the use of cytoprotective agents such as amifostine. Secondary acute myeloid leukemia and secondary myelodysplastic syndrome probably represent the worst possible long-term complications of cancer therapy in those patients who originally were cured of their primary testicular cancer. Therapy-related solid tumors are mainly associated with the use of radiation therapy and the risk for developing a therapyrelated solid tumor is increased approximately two to three times compared to the general population. In contrast, therapy-related leukemias are predominantly associated with chemotherapy, particularly with the use of topoisomerase-II inhibitors and alkylating agents. In general, the cumulative incidence of therapy-related leukemia following treatment of germ cell cancer is low. It is approximately 0.5% and 2% at 5 years of median follow-up for patients receiving etoposide at cumulative doses ≤2 g/m 2 and >2 g/m 2 , respectively. The riskbenefit analysis in patients with testicular cancer clearly favors the use of current treatment regimens including high-dose chemotherapy. However, even the acceptably low number of therapy-related long-term complications should encourage the search for equally effective but less toxic therapies. This review will highlight important available data about therapyrelated toxicity and particularly, therapy-related malignancies following cisplatin-etoposidebased chemotherapy.


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