# Are we still too late to preserve the testes? A global survey of delayed consultation and risk factors for testicular torsion: a systematic review and meta-analysis

**Authors:** Miao Sun, Chengjun Yu, Zhongyao Zeng, Yuanzhi Song, Fengming Ji, Yang Liu, Shiyu Peng, Bojingjia Liu, Runchang Wang, Shengde Wu

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/frph.2026.1735652 · Frontiers in Reproductive Health · 2026-02-24

## TL;DR

This study examines global delays in seeking treatment for testicular torsion and finds significant regional differences, with factors like misdiagnosis and healthcare access affecting outcomes.

## Contribution

A systematic review and meta-analysis of global trends in delayed consultation and risk factors for testicular torsion.

## Key findings

- Delayed consultation rates for testicular torsion vary widely across regions, with significant disparities observed.
- Misdiagnosis and initial visits to non-specialist care units increase the risk of prolonged delays in treatment.
- The pandemic and lack of manual detorsion were associated with longer symptom durations in testicular torsion cases.

## Abstract

Testicular torsion (TT) is a urological emergency that requires prompt diagnosis and urgent surgical intervention. Delayed presentation is strongly associated with testicular loss and long-term atrophy.

To systematically assess global trends in delayed consultation and mean symptom duration (MSD) in TT and to identify associated risk factors.

A systematic review and meta-analysis of studies (1970–2025) that reported delayed consultation rates, MSD, orchiectomy rates, misdiagnosis, and patient transfers (PROSPERO: CRD420251155132).

A total of 176 studies from 45 countries (100,166 cases) were included in this study, of which 15 (5,221 cases) analyzed delayed consultation and 14 (1,513 cases) analyzed MSD. The consultation rate within 6 h ranged from 14.29% to 72.58%, whereas MSD ranged from 4.35 to 107.45 h. Pooled risk ratios (RRs) indicated that abdominal pain reduced the risk of delayed for >6 h [RR 0.91, 95% CI 0.68–1.21] but increased the risk for >12 h [1.19, 1.04–1.37] and >24 h [1.05, 0.77–1.43], while hydrocele decreased [>12 h [0.69, 0.47–1.02], >24 h [0.56, 0.34–0.92]]. Misdiagnosis [>12 h [1.52, 1.27–1.83], >24 h [1.10, 0.63–1.92]] and first visit to primary or secondary care unit [>12 h [1.29, 0.96–1.74], >24 h [1.36, 0.98–1.91]] significantly increased the risk. Transfer was protective and associated with lower odds of prolonged delays [>6 h [0.74, 0.50–1.08], >24 h [0.63, 0.44–0.90]]. A comparative meta-analysis of MSD demonstrated longer durations during the pandemic (SMD −0.37; 95% CI: −0.59, −0.14) in patients without manual detorsion (−0.70; −1.03, −0.37) and in patients misdiagnosed (2.36; 0.34, 4.38). Transfer from other hospitals was associated with shorter durations (−0.42; −0.60, −0.23).

Delayed presentation remains widespread with notable regional disparities. Symptoms, healthcare pathways, misdiagnosis, and public health crises affect timely care. Improved awareness, optimized referral pathways, and strengthened emergency access are essential to minimize testicular loss.

identifier CRD420251155132.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** testicular torsion (MONDO:0008541)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** hydrocele (MESH:D006848), atrophy (MESH:D001284), abdominal pain (MESH:D015746), testicular loss (MESH:D013733), TT (MESH:D013086)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

93 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12971663/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12971663