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Second primary cancer in irradiated stage I testicular seminoma.

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TLDR
There is a low, but significant risk of solid SPC among patients apparently cured of early stage seminoma, and it will be important in future surveillance studies of stage I seminoma to assess the risk of SPC in the non-irradiated patients.
Abstract
The incidence of second primary cancer (SPC) was determined in 64 irradiated stage I testicular seminoma patients, treated and followed at the Northern Israel Oncology Center from 1968 to 1988. Seven (11%) patients developed a total of eight second cancers. The cumulative risk for developing second primary cancer at ten, 15 and 20 years following the diagnosis of seminoma was 2.5%, 5.1% and 8.9%, respectively. Two patients developed SPC within the radiation field (urinary bladder, sigmoid colon) and four patients outside the radiation field (bronchogenic cancer, thymoma, malignant melanoma, thyroid cancer). In two patients, who developed lung cancer and testicular seminoma, respectively, scatter dose from the main radiation field could not be excluded as one of the factors contributing to the SPC. Three patients died as a direct result of their SPC. It is concluded that there is a low, but significant risk of solid SPC among patients apparently cured of early stage seminoma. It will be important in future surveillance studies of stage I seminoma to assess the risk of SPC in the non-irradiated patients.

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Mortality After Cure of Testicular Seminoma

TL;DR: Long-term survivors of seminoma treated with post-orchiectomy XRT are at significant excess risk of death as a result of cardiac disease or second cancer, and management strategies that minimize these risks but maintain the excellent hitherto observed cure rates need to be actively pursued.
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Surveillance in stage I testicular cancer

TL;DR: Treatment results on 695 stage I testicular cancer patients followed with surveillance are described, with overall survival for patients with stage I disease is 98%, and the cause specific survival 100%.
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[Long-term tumor control and fertility after para-aortic limited radiotherapy of stage I seminoma].

TL;DR: The aim is to review patterns of relapse in a long-term analysis of patients with Stage I seminoma treated by orchidectomy and radiotherapy to the paraaortic nodes only and to follow follicle stimulating hormone.
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"Hockey Stick" may Strike Back: Hepatocellular Carcinoma on Noncirrhotic Liver as a Late Toxicity of Lombo-Aortic Radiotherapy for Seminoma. A Review Triggered by an Unusual Case.

TL;DR: A case in a patient of the authors' institution is described, and the relevant literature and large epidemiologic studies are reviewed to understand those late and serious toxicity features of hepatocellular carcinoma.