نتایج جستجو برای: Testicular Carcinoma in Situ (CIS)

تعداد نتایج: 17056855  

Davodi F Khorramkhorshid Pourkeramati F, Sadeghi MR Sadeghi Tabar A Soltan Ghoraee H

Background: Testicular Carcinoma in situ (CIS), also known as intratubular germ cell neoplasia (ITGCN), is a pre-invasive precursor of testicular germ cell tumours (TCGTs), i.e seminomas and non-seminomas -the commonest cancer type of male adolescents and young adults- which can be diagnosed using a surgical biopsy. Infertility is one of the condition known to predispose to TGCT, but based on s...

Almstrup K, Daugaard G Foged NT Hansen JD J Lippert M Mogensen HO Nielsen JE Rajpert-De Meyts E Skakkebaek NE

Background: Testicular cancer (TC) is usually diagnosed after manifestation of an overt tumour. Tumour formation is preceded by a pre-invasive and asymptomatic stage, carcinoma in situ (CIS) testis, except for very rare subtypes. The CIS cells are located within seminiferous tubules but can be exfoliated and detected in ejaculates with specific CIS markers. Materials and Methods: We have built ...

Journal: :Asian journal of andrology 2012
Gert R Dohle Saad Elzanaty Niels J van Casteren

Testicular biopsy was considered the cornerstone of male infertility diagnosis for many years in men with unexplained infertility and azoospermia. Recent guidelines for male infertility have limited the indications for a diagnostic testicular biopsy to the confirmation of obstructive azoospermia in men with normal size testes and normal reproductive hormones. Nowadays, testicular biopsies are m...

2004
Kristian Almstrup Christina E. Hoei-Hansen Ute Wirkner Jonathon Blake Christian Schwager Wilhelm Ansorge John E. Nielsen Niels E. Skakkebæk Ewa Rajpert-De Meyts Henrik Leffers

Carcinoma in situ (CIS) is the common precursor of histologically heterogeneous testicular germ cell tumors (TGCTs), which in recent decades have markedly increased and now are the most common malignancy of young men. Using genome-wide gene expression profiling, we identified >200 genes highly expressed in testicular CIS, including many never reported in testicular neoplasms. Expression was fur...

Journal: :Cancer research 2004
Kristian Almstrup Christina E Hoei-Hansen Ute Wirkner Jonathon Blake Christian Schwager Wilhelm Ansorge John E Nielsen Niels E Skakkebaek Ewa Rajpert-De Meyts Henrik Leffers

Carcinoma in situ (CIS) is the common precursor of histologically heterogeneous testicular germ cell tumors (TGCTs), which in recent decades have markedly increased and now are the most common malignancy of young men. Using genome-wide gene expression profiling, we identified >200 genes highly expressed in testicular CIS, including many never reported in testicular neoplasms. Expression was fur...

2004
Isao Kuroda Munehisa Ueno Tomoko Mitsuhashi Ken Nakagawa Hitoshi Takuji Tsukamoto Nobuhiro Deguchi

Background: Between 2% and 5% of malignant germ-cell tumors in men arise at extragonadal sites. Of extragonadal germ cell tumors, testicular carcinoma in situ (CIS) are present in 31-42% of cases, and CIS are reported to have low sensitivity to chemotherapy in spite of the various morphology and to have a high likelihood of developing into testicular tumors. A testicular biopsy may thus be high...

Journal: :Molecular human reproduction 2004
C E Hoei-Hansen J E Nielsen K Almstrup M A Hansen N E Skakkebaek E Rajpert-DeMeyts H Leffers

Virtually all testicular germ cell tumours originate from a common precursor, the carcinoma in situ (CIS) cell. The precise nature of the molecular mechanisms leading to CIS remains largely unknown. We performed the first systematic analysis of gene expression in testis with CIS compared to normal testis by the differential display (DDRT-PCR) method, with subsequent analysis by RT-PCR and in si...

2013
Gerard A. Tarulli Peter G. Stanton Kate L. Loveland Ewa Rajpert-De Meyts Robert I. McLachlan Sarah J. Meachem

It is widely held that the somatic cell population that is responsible for sperm development and output (Sertoli cells) is terminally differentiated and unmodifiable in adults. It is postulated, with little evidence, that Sertoli cells are not terminally differentiated in some phenotypes of infertility and testicular cancer. This study sought to compare markers of Sertoli cell differentiation i...

Journal: :British medical journal 1986
H von der Maase M Rørth S Walbom-Jørgensen B L Sørensen I S Christophersen T Hald G K Jacobsen J G Berthelsen N E Skakkebaek

Carcinoma in situ in the contralateral testis was diagnosed in 27 of 500 patients (5.4%) with unilateral testicular germ cell cancer. Eight of the 27 patients received intensive chemotherapy for spread of their initial testicular cancer. Follow up biopsy studies did not detect changes of carcinoma in situ in any of these patients, and none developed a contralateral testicular tumour (observatio...

Journal: :Annals of oncology : official journal of the European Society for Medical Oncology 2005
C E Hoei-Hansen E Rajpert-De Meyts G Daugaard N E Skakkebaek

Testicular germ cell tumours (TGCT), including seminomas, embryonal carcinomas, teratomas and yolk sac tumours, have a common precursor, the carcinoma in situ (CIS) cell. Recent gene expression studies displaying close similarity of CIS cells to embryonic stem cells support the longstanding theory that CIS most likely originates in utero from fetal gonocytes. The clinical association between th...

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