Affiliation:
1. Department of Cytology and Gynecological Pathology Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research Chandigarh India
2. Department of Histopathology Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research Chandigarh India
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundTesticular malignancy is the most common solid organ cancer occurring in young men. The most common testicular malignancy is germ cell tumor. Extragonadal malignancies such as lymphomas are rare. Testicular fine‐needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) in cancer is a bit controversial amidst fear of tumor seeding along the needle tract. Nevertheless, its largely safe, cost‐effective technique providing a quick and fairly reliable diagnosis.MethodsA retrospective analysis of testicular malignancies on FNAC over a period of 9 years with cyto‐histological correlation wherever possible was carried out. FNAC slides and cell blocks with immunocytochemistry wherever done were retrieved.ResultsA total of 74 cases were obtained. The age ranged from 1 year to 65 years. Infiltration by leukemia was the most common malignancy detected in pediatric population, while germ cell tumors were common amongst young adults and middle‐aged men. In elderly, metastatic carcinoma, infiltration by lymphoma were identified. On FNAC, 38 cases were of leukemic infiltration, 27 of germ cell tumors (subtyped as mixed germ cell tumors‐15 cases, seminoma‐11 cases, and yolk sac tumor‐1 case) with two cases each of non‐Hodgkin lymphoma, Leydig cell tumor, metastatic adenocarcinoma, and one case each of metastatic small cell carcinoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, and malignant neoplasm. Histological correlation was available in 15/74 cases. Only 3 cases were discordant. Seeding of tumor along the needle tract was not seen.ConclusionThe current study deciphers the cytological spectrum of testicular malignancies on FNAC and highlights its importance as a reliable modality for a prompt diagnosis of testicular tumors guiding patient management.
Subject
General Medicine,Histology,Pathology and Forensic Medicine