Men and woman discussing testicular cancerWhich surgery for testicular cancer?

This page is about surgery for testicular cancer. Below there is information about

 

A quick guide to what's on this page

Removing a testicle

You will almost certainly have had an operation to have your testicle removed in order to diagnose your cancer. This operation is called an orchidectomy or orchiectomy. The testicle can be replaced with a false one, called a prosthesis. This will mean that your scrotum appears normal after your operation.

Your ability to have an erection and your fertility will not be affected as long as only one testicle is removed. Having cancer in both testicles is rare. If you do have both testicles removed, you will no longer be able to father children. You will need hormone replacement.

Surgery to remove lymph nodes

If you still have enlarged lymph nodes in your chest or abdomen after your radiotherapy or chemotherapy, you may have an operation to have them removed.

Removing lymph nodes with keyhole surgery

'Keyhole surgery' can be used to remove abdominal lymph nodes after testicular cancer. This has to be done by a surgeon who is experienced in the technique. You need to understand all the risks and benefits before you agree to keyhole surgery.

Removing lung tumours

Sometimes specialists will suggest surgery to remove secondary testicular cancer that is growing in the lungs.

 

Removing a testicle

You will almost certainly have had an operation to have your testicle removed in order to diagnose your cancer. This operation is called an orchidectomy or orchiectomy. The testicle can be replaced with a false one, called a prosthesis. This will mean that your scrotum appears normal after your operation.

Your ability to have an erection and your fertility will not be affected as long as only one testicle is removed. Having cancer in both testicles is rare. If you do have both testicles removed, you will no longer be able to father children. You will need hormone replacement. There is more about this in the surgery side effects section.

 

Surgery to remove lymph nodes

If you still have enlarged lymph nodes in your chest or abdomen after your radiotherapy or chemotherapy, you may have an operation to have them removed. Removal of abdominal lymph nodes is called retroperitoneal lymph node dissection. Removal of lymph nodes in the chest is called para aortic lymph node dissection. These operations are done while you are asleep, under general anaesthetic.

Removing the lymph glands from the abdomen can cause infertility in some men. It is sometimes possible to do an operation called a ‘nerve sparing’ lymph node dissection to try to stop this happening. This is a highly specialised operation and may not be available at all treatment centres. It is not always possible to do if there is cancer close to the nerve pathways. Leaving the nerves behind could increase the risk of the cancer coming back. There is more about this in the surgery side effects section.

 

Keyhole surgery to remove lymph nodes

In March 2006, the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) looked at the evidence for using 'keyhole surgery' to remove abdominal lymph nodes after testicular cancer. This is called laparoscopic retroperitoneal lymph node dissection. With this type of operation, the surgeon makes 4 or 5 small cuts (incisions). He or she puts a type of telescope through into the abdomen, called a laparoscope. The laparoscope has an eye piece and hand controls for surgical instruments. The surgeon can see inside the body and carry out the operation while looking down the eye piece of the laparoscope. Generally, you recover more quickly after keyhole surgery because you are not having such a big operation. In the studies NICE looked at, hospital stay was around 3 or 4 days after keyhole surgery and about 10 days after open surgery.

NICE have decided that there is not enough evidence to recommend that keyhole surgery replaces open surgery for removing abdominal lymph nodes after testicular cancer. But it is reasonable for surgeons to carry out this operation providing

  • They are experienced at doing both keyhole and open surgery to remove retroperitoneal lymph nodes
  • Your treatment is either part of a research project, or your surgeon has taken measures to follow your progress (audit)
  • There are arrangements in place to make sure all benefits and risks are explained to you before you agree to it

Surgeons have to be experienced because keyhole surgery is very technically demanding. And because they sometimes need to move from keyhole to open surgery during an operation because of complications. In the studies NICE looked at, this happened in between 3 and 10 out of every 100 cases (3 - 10%). The most common complication of keyhole lymph node removal is damage to a blood vessel or the bowel during the operation.

 

Surgery to remove secondary cancer in the lungs

Sometimes specialists will suggest surgery to remove secondary testicular cancer that is growing in the lungs. Your specialist may suggest this because

  • There is still a sign of cancer after chemotherapy has finished
  • The cancer is thought to be resistant to chemotherapy

Sometimes, if the cancer cannot be cured any other way, this treatment is given more than once if the tumours grow back again. This will depend on how fit you are. And on how much treatment you want to have.

This is major surgery done under general anaesthetic. Most of the information in the section on having your operation will apply. As well as all the usual drips and drains, you will have a tube into your chest for a few days. This will be connected to a suction bottle. It is there to help your lung reinflate - surgery to the chest always causes the lung to collapse but it can be re-inflated over a couple of days. You will have painkillers for some days after the operation. The surgery may involve cutting through a couple of ribs and this can be painful while it heals.