Abstract

A man, aged 21 years, presented with a 4-month history of progressive swelling of the right testicle. Ultrasound revealed a heterogenous solid mass in the right testicle suspicious for malignancy. Further work-up included CT scans, which identified a 2-cm retroperitoneal lymph node; there was no evidence of thoracic metastases. Serum tumor markers revealed a mildly elevated α-fetoprotein (AFP) and normal lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG). The patient underwent right radical inguinal orchiectomy. Pathology evaluation demonstrated 1% teratoma with extensive secondary somatic-type malignant components of embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma and chondrosarcoma. No lymphovascular invasion was identified. Repeat tumor markers showed normal AFP, LDH, and hCG. Follow-up short-interval CT scans confirmed a dominant 2-cm interaortocaval lymph node with no evidence of distant metastases. The patient underwent retroperitoneal lymph node dissection, which revealed 1 of 24 lymph nodes positive for similar somatic-type malignancy composed of rhabdomyosarcoma and chondrosarcoma as well as undifferentiated spindle cell sarcoma with extranodal extension. Immunohistochemistry revealed that tumor cells were positive for myogenin and desmin and negative for SALL4.

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