Independent factors associated with advanced testicular germ cell tumors: the roles of smoking, lymphovascular invasion, and tumor size
Selahattin Çelik, Engin Eren Kavak, İsmail Dilli, Esra Zeynelgil, Hatice Ayyıldız Sevim, Samed Rahatlı, Tülay Eren

TL;DR
Smoking, lymphovascular invasion, and larger tumor size are linked to advanced testicular cancer, while obesity is not.
Contribution
Identified independent risk factors for advanced-stage testicular germ cell tumors using clinicopathological and lifestyle data.
Findings
Smoking, lymphovascular invasion, and tumor size ≥4 cm were independently associated with advanced-stage disease.
Obesity (BMI) was not significantly associated with advanced-stage presentation.
Recurrence was more frequent in smokers and LVI-positive cases, though not statistically significant.
Abstract
Testicular germ cell tumors (TGCTs) are the most common solid malignancies among young men. Although overall survival exceeds 95%, a subset of patients still present with advanced disease or relapse. Identifying clinicopathological and modifiable lifestyle factors associated with advanced-stage presentation may improve risk stratification and guide management. This retrospective study included 96 patients with TGCTs treated at a single tertiary center. Data on smoking status, body mass index (BMI), lymphovascular invasion (LVI), and tumor size were analyzed. Associations between these parameters and stage at diagnosis were assessed using chi-square tests and multivariable logistic regression. Recurrence-free survival (RFS) was evaluated by the Kaplan–Meier method. Among 96 patients (median age, 31 years), 59.4% had early-stage and 40.6% had advanced-stage disease. Smoking (OR = 8.17;…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTesticular diseases and treatments · Ovarian cancer diagnosis and treatment · Sarcoma Diagnosis and Treatment
