Testicular cancer begins when abnormal cells grow in one or both testicles (testes), the glands that produce testosterone and sperm. Almost all cases start in the germ cells that make sperm. These germ-cell tumors are broadly classified as seminomas and nonseminomas because they behave and are treated differently.
Understanding Testicular Cancer
Testicular cancer is the most common cancer in young adult men (roughly ages 20–39) and is highly curable, even when it has spread.
Types
Seminoma
tends to grow more slowly and is more sensitive to radiation.
Nonseminoma
often grows and spreads more quickly; any mixed tumor with nonseminoma elements is treated as a nonseminoma.
Signs & Symptoms
Who Gets It & Risk Factors
Screening
There is no evidence that routine screening (e.g., population testicular self exam or clinician exam) reduces deaths from testicular cancer; because treatments are highly effective, screening can lead to unnecessary procedures without proven mortality benefit. Discuss your risk and symptom awareness with your clinician.
Diagnosis
Evaluation typically includes:
Your pathology report will describe the histology, tumor location (cardia vs noncardia), and may include biomarker testing (e.g., HER2, PDL1, MSI/dMMR) that can influence treatment decisions in advanced disease.
Staging & Risk Grouping
After orchiectomy, staging (0–III) considers tumor extent, lymphnode involvement, metastases, and post-surgery tumor marker levels. Clinicians also use risk grouping (especially for metastatic disease) to guide treatment intensity.
Treatment Options
Your plan is personalized based on tumor type (seminoma vs nonseminoma), stage/markers, imaging, and your preferences. Care is coordinated by a multidisciplinary team (urology, medical oncology, radiation oncology, radiology, pathology, fertility counseling).
Surgery (inguinal orchiectomy)
standard first step for most tumors; some patients may also need retroperitoneal lymphnode dissection (RPLND) depending on type/stage and team strategy.
Active surveillance (Stage I)
careful follow-up with markers and imaging to avoid over treatment while maintaining excellent cure rates—commonly used after orchiectomy in selected seminoma and nonseminoma cases.
Chemotherapy
cures many patients with nodepositive or metastatic disease; regimen selection depends on histology/risk group. (Testicular cancer is highly chemosensitive.)
Radiation therapy
an option primarily for seminoma in certain stage settings; not used for nonseminoma.
Fertility & survivorship: Treatment (including surgery, chemo, or radiation) can affect fertility; ask about sperm banking before therapy. Most men with low-stage disease and many with advanced disease are cured and go on to long lives.
Prognosis
Outcomes are excellent: cure rates exceed 90% for seminoma overall and approach 100% for many low-stage seminomas and nonseminomas with appropriate therapy.
Follow-Up Care
After treatment (or while on surveillance), follow-up usually includes:
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Sources & Patient Friendly References
All information was taken from the NCI (National Cancer Institute) and ACS (American Cancer Society).