[Conventional versus high-dose salvage chemotherapy for relapsed testicular germ cell tumours].
Christoph OingMarcus HentrichPublished in: Aktuelle Urologie (2024)
Since the introduction of cisplatin-based combination chemotherapy, patients with metastatic germ cell tumours achieve very high cure rates of >80%. Nevertheless, about 30% of patients relapse despite guideline-endorsed first-line treatment. Of these, again about 50% of patients can still achieve cure with platinum-based salvage chemotherapy and eventually post-chemotherapy residual mass resection.Salvage chemotherapy generally involves platinum-based combination chemotherapy, either as conventional dose cisplatin-based combinations again or as high-dose chemotherapy with subsequent autologous stem cell transplantation.To date, high level evidence from randomised trials supporting the use of salvage high-dose chemotherapy for all patients relapsing after first-line treatment remains lacking, but a large international retrospective registry study had shown a 15% overall survival benefit for patients undergoing salvage high-dose chemotherapy.In this article, we summarise the available literature on the different salvage treatment approaches and discuss these in the light of current treatment guideline recommendations for the management of testicular cancer.
Keyphrases
- high dose
- stem cell transplantation
- locally advanced
- germ cell
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- low dose
- newly diagnosed
- patients undergoing
- chronic kidney disease
- peritoneal dialysis
- clinical trial
- systematic review
- prognostic factors
- squamous cell carcinoma
- multiple sclerosis
- chemotherapy induced
- bone marrow
- rheumatoid arthritis
- stem cells
- acute myeloid leukemia
- patient reported outcomes
- open label
- papillary thyroid