J Soc 2020 06 005
J Soc 2020 06 005
J Soc 2020 06 005
Tu mo r s
Updates in Diagnosis and Management
a,b c,d,
Amanda R. Stram, MD, PhD , Kenneth A. Kesler, MD *
KEYWORDS
Germ cell tumors Mediastinal tumors Nonseminomatous germ cell cancer
Thoracic surgery Chemotherapy
KEY POINTS
Primary mediastinal nonseminomatous germ cell tumors represent a rare but important
malignancy that occurs in otherwise young and healthy patients.
Treatment is challenging and involves cisplatin-based chemotherapy followed by surgery
to remove residual disease.
Avoiding bleomycin-containing chemotherapy in the treatment of primary mediastinal
nonseminomatous germ cell tumors is important.
Prechemotherapy and postchemotherapy pathology as well as postoperative serum tu-
mor markers are independent predictors of long-term survival.
INTRODUCTION
The mediastinum is the most common site of extragonadal origin of germ cell tumors,
with 5% to 10% of germ cell tumors arising primarily within the anterior mediastinum
and accounting for 15% to 20% of all anterior mediastinal tumors.1,2 Mediastinal germ
cell tumors comprise 3 distinct histologic types: teratoma (mature and immature sub-
types), seminoma, and nonseminomatous germ cell tumors (NSGCTs). Mature tera-
tomas comprise 60% to 70% of mediastinal germ cell tumors and are considered
benign, and surgical resection is curative. Immature teratomas behave more aggres-
sively and have poor outcomes compared with their mature counterparts. Primary
mediastinal seminomas represent about 40% of malignant mediastinal germ cell tu-
mors. Seminomas are sensitive to chemotherapy and have excellent cure rates with
a
Department of Surgery, Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Indiana University Melvin and
Bren Simon Cancer Center, 545 Barnhill Drive, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USA; b Department of
Surgery, Thoracic Surgery Division, Indiana University, 545 Barnhill Drive, Indianapolis, IN
46202, USA; c Department of Surgery, Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Indiana University
Melvin and Bren Simon Cancer Center, 545 Barnhill Drive EM #212, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USA;
d
Department of Surgery, Thoracic Surgery Division, Indiana University, 545 Barnhill Drive EM
#212, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USA
* Corresponding author. 545 Barnhill Drive EM #212, Indianapolis, IN 46202.
E-mail address: kkesler@iupui.edu
DIAGNOSIS
TREATMENT
Chemotherapy
The treatment strategy for PMNSGCT is multimodal therapy with cisplatin-based
chemotherapy as initial treatment followed by surgical resection of residual tumor.
There is no role for radiation therapy in the treatment of PMNSGCT. Development of
cisplatin-based combination chemotherapy for NSGCT has been responsible for
vastly improved long-term survival rates compared with outcomes in the precisplatin
era. Four courses of bleomycin, etoposide, and cisplatin chemotherapy have tradition-
ally been considered the standard of care for patients with poor-risk NSGCT, including
Mediastinal Germ Cell Tumors 3
Fig. 1. Illustrative chest CT images of patients presenting with PMNSGCT, showing heteroge-
neous tumors arising from the anterior mediastinum.
Surgery
Ideally, STM levels normalize after chemotherapy, or at least significantly decrease,
and tumor dimension shrinks. However, there always remains a residual mediastinal
mass, most of which contain residual disease for which surgical resection is indi-
cated. Most residual tumor masses contain teratoma, persistent nonseminomatous
germ cell cancer, and non–germ cell cancer cells, and complete tumor necrosis is
found in only a minority of cases.9 Surgery to remove residual disease is typically
planned 4 to 6 weeks following chemotherapy to allow for patient recovery. The
standard of care for patients with testicular NSGCT who relapse serologically
shortly after first-line chemotherapy involves second-line chemotherapy, before
considering surgery. However, response rates of standard cisplatin-based salvage
chemotherapy for PMNSGCT are notoriously poor.10 Moreover, although increased
STM levels are diagnostic of PMNSGCT, postchemotherapy STM levels lack high
sensitivity or specificity for residual NSGCT. In addition, the propensity of
PMNSGCT to transform into non–germ cell cancers, which are typically STM nega-
tive as well as refractory to chemotherapy, further questions the role of second-line
chemotherapy before surgery. Therefore, the authors subscribe to a policy of
removing residual disease if deemed operable, regardless of STM status, because
the overall results of surgical salvage in patients with residual malignancy after first-
line chemotherapy seem to be superior to the response rates of second-line
chemotherapy.11,12
Patients are rarely considered to be inoperable; however, extensive great vessel or
middle mediastinal involvement may preclude safe resection. For patients with persis-
tent metastatic disease after first-line chemotherapy, the authors use an individualized
approach. In patients with normal STM levels after first-line chemotherapy, nonpulmo-
nary and pulmonary metastases are resected when feasible, particularly if suspicious
for teratoma. Extrathoracic metastases are typically removed as a staged procedure
before or after mediastinal surgery. Surgery is undertaken for select patients with
increased STM levels and limited areas of pulmonary metastases deemed resectable
at the time of surgery to remove the residual mediastinal mass. For patients with
increased STM levels after first-line chemotherapy and systemic or extensive pulmo-
nary metastases, second-line chemotherapy, more recently in the form of high-dose
chemotherapy with peripheral stem cell transplant, should be given before proceeding
with surgery.13 Patients with increased STM levels after first-line chemotherapy
caused by an isolated CNS metastasis can be treated with stereotactic radiation
and/or surgery with CNS disease control before removal of mediastinal disease.
Rare patients show a so-called growing teratoma syndrome, defined by a rapidly
growing symptomatic mediastinal mass with decreasing STM level before completion
of 4 chemotherapy cycles.14 In these cases, chemotherapy is discontinued and urgent
surgery undertaken.
Surgery can be challenging, because chemotherapy results in fibrosis of mediastinal
tissues surrounding residual disease. Our technique to remove residual mediastinal
Mediastinal Germ Cell Tumors 5
Table 1
Anatomic structures removed en bloc with the residual mass after chemotherapy in 244
operative survivors with primary mediastinal nonseminomatous germ cell tumors
Data from Outcomes Following Surgery for Primary Mediastinal Nonseminomatous Germ Cell Tu-
mors in the Cisplatin Era. Kesler, Kenneth A. et al. The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Sur-
gery, Published online April 22, 2020
6 Stram & Kesler
require bilateral innominate vein removal, preferably the right innominate to superior
vena cava with ligation of the left innominate vein. Our conduit preference for great
vein reconstruction is cryopreserved descending thoracic aortic allografts. Cardiopul-
monary bypass capabilities should be made available for select patients with great
vessel or cardiac involvement. Perioperative fluid and oxygen administration should
be kept to a minimum, particularly in patients who may have received bleomycin
before surgery.
Follow-up
Patients who present to surgery with increased STM levels should have the levels
measured before hospital discharge and at 1 month postoperatively. Patients with
pathologic evidence of viable NSGCT and normal postoperative STM levels should
be given 2 additional cycles of etoposide/cisplatin. Current practice includes consid-
eration of high-dose chemotherapy for patients with persistently increased postoper-
ative STM levels and recurrent PMNSGCT.13 Routine long-term follow-up includes
chest radiographs and STM levels every 2 months for the first year, every 4 months
for the second year, every 6 months in years 3 through 5, then annually. For patients
who pathologically show a component of teratoma, CT imaging is also recommended
during follow-up. Patients with recurrent disease are treated on an individual basis,
with surgery favored for teratoma and limited areas of malignancy.
Outcomes
STMs seem to remain important from a prognosis standpoint. By univariate analysis,
our recent study showed that preoperative increased AFP level, increased STM levels
in general, and increasing STM levels were predictive of poor survival, whereas normal
STM level was protective. Even though increased postchemotherapy STM levels did
not remain statistically significant in the multivariate model, persistent increase of STM
levels after surgery, likely indicating residual microscopic NSGCT, was predictive of
adverse survival.6 Our institutional approach now uses high-dose chemotherapy in
patients with increasing postoperative STM levels with an expectation of low but
improving cure rates.13 A multicenter review of patients with extragonadal NSGCT,
including 341 with PMNSGCT, identified pretreatment increased bHCG level and non-
pulmonary visceral metastases as adverse risk factors for survival.5 Of note, less than
half of the patients with PMNSGCT in this study underwent postchemotherapy sur-
gery. Although prechemotherapy tumor histology was not provided, it is plausible
that increased bHCG level was a surrogate for the presence of choriocarcinoma,
which was independently predictive in our recent series. In contrast, pure mediastinal
seminomas have extremely high cure rates with cisplatin-based chemotherapy
alone.3,4 Although all patients in our recent series had serologic or pathologic evidence
of NSGCT, it is perhaps not surprising that the subset of cases with tumors containing
a malignant seminoma component had significantly improved survival.
Although overall 5-year survival averages 45%, individual survival after surgery for
PMNSGCT has been reported to range widely, with rates reported between 30%
and 90%. Similar to prechemotherapy pathology, features identified in resected medi-
astinal masses can be variable and mixed, potentially containing elements of tumor
necrosis, teratoma, and malignancy. Current and previous studies from our institution
as well as a report from Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center continue to show that
the pathology features identified in the residual mass following chemotherapy is inde-
pendently predictive of long-term survival and largely responsible for variable survival
rates (Fig. 2).6,7,16 Patients who show complete tumor necrosis have excellent long-
term prognosis. Patients with pathologic evidence of teratoma, with or without tumor
Mediastinal Germ Cell Tumors 7
Fig. 2. Long-term survival in a series of 244 operative survivors with primary mediastinal
nonseminomatous germ cell tumors based on the worst pathologic diagnosis microscopi-
cally identified in the residual mass (necrosis, teratoma, or malignant). (Data from Outcomes
Following Surgery for Primary Mediastinal Nonseminomatous Germ Cell Tumors in the
Cisplatin Era. Kesler, Kenneth A. et al. The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery,
Published online April 22, 2020.)
SUMMARY
DISCLOSURE
The authors declare no conflict of interest. There was no external funding source.
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