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Management of monorchid patients with previous testis cancer: the role of frozen sections and the real possibility of testis sparing surgery in a large retrospective series

Minerva Urol Nephrol. 2026 Jan 27. doi: 10.23736/S2724-6051.25.06301-3. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The role of surgical exploration and frozen sections (FSs) in monorchid patients with testicular nodules is still not well defined. We tested the role of surgical exploration and FSs in monorchid patients and the impact on the chance of testis sparing surgery (TSS).

METHODS: We identified 81 consecutive monorchid patients with testicular nodules between 2008 and 2024 candidates to surgical exploration and FSs. The statistical significance of differences in medians and proportions was tested with the Wilcoxon rank sum and chi-square tests. Multivariable logistic regression models (MLRMs) were used.

RESULTS: Testicular lesions number was available in 61 patients and was one in 35 (57.4%) of those, two in 15 (24.6%), three in 7 (11.5%) and more than three in 4 (6.5%). Median larger lesion size was 12 mm (IQR 9-20 mm). FSs were performed in 59 (73%) patients and showed germ-cell tumor (GCT) in 53 (65.4%). Orchidectomy was performed in 68 patients (84%). In 55 of 56 patients (98.3%) definitive histology confirmed FSs. Thirteen (16%) had TSS including 7 patients with seminomatous GCT, of those none had disease relapse at follow-up. At MLRMs older age was associated with lower probability of GCT (Odds Ratio 0.91, Confidence Interval 0.84-0.99, P value 0.03).

CONCLUSIONS: FSs are feasible and reliable in monorchid patients following a history of GCT. Nonetheless, TSS is rarely performed, as most of these patients actually have GCT. The few ones who had TSS had excellent oncological results.

PMID:41591767 | DOI:10.23736/S2724-6051.25.06301-3

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