ascending urethral infection
reflux of infected urine into prostatic ducts entering into the posterior urethra
invasion of colonic bacteria through direct extension or lymphatic spread
hematogenous seeding
Organisms: E. coli, GNR, Pseudomonas, Proteus, Klebsiella, S. aureus, coagulase-negative Staphyloccocus
Acute bacterial prostatitis
fever, chills, dysuria / UTI organisms / do not express prostatic secretions (risk of
bacteremia) / urine culture usu. positive / fast response to IV antibiotics (treat 4 weeks)
Chronic bacterial prostatitis
WBC’s in secretions / diagnosed by quantitative bacterial localization cultures (3 cultures,
1st 10 ml, 2nd 10 ml, post-DRE 10ml, which it the EPS sample) / may require 1-2 months
abx / TURPS in refractory cases, but relapse is common if infection not completely cleared
Chronic abacterial prostatitis
most common prostatitis / NO Hx of UTI / high WBC, negative culture / low back pain
chlamydia (current thinking actually is that chlamydia does not play much role in
prostatitis), ?ureaplasma / fungal, anaerobes, RPR, viral / can get chemical prostatitis from
urethral spasm and reflux / alpha-adrenergic blockers can sometimes help with voiding
Granulomatous prostatitis
foreign body reaction to extravasated secretions / hard nodule / may resemble carcinoma
Tuberculous prostatitis
systemic Tb / may follow BCG immunotherapy for bladder Ca (PSA will return to normal)
Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) NOT PRE-MALIGNANT
occurs 10 yrs earlier in blacks
Symptoms: urinary retention, control / urinary tract infection, prostatitis
Complications: may lead to bladder SMC hypertrophy, diverticulum
Pathology: transition zone and periurethral glands / 2 cell layers is a good sign
Treatment:
Medical: a-1 blockers reduce smooth muscle contraction (more immediate benefit with smaller
prostates) / finasteride (Proscar) blocks conversion of testosterone to DHT (prostatic
hypertrophy and male pattern hair loss)
Surgical (no longer 1st line): TURP (prostatectomy) / ? laser and cryoablation
Prostate Cancer
most common cancer in males / 2nd leading cause of cancer death in males / incidence increasing in U.S.
Presentation: presents late in its course (elevated PSA + urinary symptoms is 60% chance of
prostate cancer; 16% of cases have elevated PSA as only symptom) / usu. posterior peripheral zone, prominent nucleoli
Course: prostate intra-epithelial neoplasia (PIN) precedes CA by > 10 yrs / wide-spectrum of aggressivity / secretory (androgen-dependent growth/receptors synthesize PSA)
Blacks – early, high grade
White – middle onset, variable aggresivity
Asian – later onset, less aggressive (more dietary)
Diagnosis:
PSA > 3 ng/ml over age 40 (repeat test x 1) / 4.0 to 10.0 marginal level (25% chance of malignancy), but must chart over time, because 2 is moving up the curve already / 26-68% newly diagnosed have proven extra-prostate mets / free PSA can help for marginal total PSA (high free fraction is good because it could mean the high total was misleading due to nature of assay)
Bone scan: osteoblastic activity well seen (unlike myeloma and sometimes thyroid, renal mets which are osteolytic and do not take up tracer)
MRI if trying to assess resectability
Staging: Gleason’s grading system
sum of 1st and 2nd most predominant architectural pattern / 2-10 (over 5-6, aggressive)
Stage A (not palpable)
Stage B (palpable) note: A2 may have worse prognosis than B1
Stage C (extra-prostatic) most patients present with stage C or D
Stage D (distant mets)
Prevention
yearly DRE and PSA screening > 50 yrs (blacks > 40 yrs) / if value increased > 20% in 1 yr (considered positive PSA test consider biopsy)
Treatment: (A or B) surgery, radiation / (C or D) hormonal manipulation
radical retropubic prostatectomy (may be curative in early stage; impotence, incontinence may result, but sometimes function returns over 4-6 months)
radiation therapy another option / PSA levels slowly decline after (side effects occur late)
LHRH (GnRH) agonist (goserelin, buserelin leuprolide) most efficacious (1st line)
antiandrogen (flutamide) not quite as efficacious, does not cause impotence
combination LHRH + anti-androgen more side effects (impotence), only very slight
increase in 5 yr survival / total blockade used for months before surgery
orchiectomy works but most men don’t want this
adrenalectomy ?
DES (estrogen) efficacious but increased MI, thrombosis
chemotherapy no increased survival has been shown (this may have changed since ‘06)
Testes [Ddx of small testes]
Cryptorchidism
¼ bilateral / contralateral, descended testis may show changes / XXY / seen by age 2
low germ cell development / hyalinization of seminiferous tubule BM / interstitial fibrosis
Treatment: scrotal placement < 2 yrs (sterility may ensue if not corrected before age 5) / resection to prevent CA
Leydig cell hyperplasia
Symptoms: inguinal hernias / orchiopexy may prevent infertility, but not neoplasm risk
Testicular Torsion
Mechanism: arteries usually patent / hemorrhagic or anemic infarction / structural cause (incomplete descension (high attachment of tunica vaginalis), absence of scrotal ligaments, testicular atrophy)
Presentation: high riding, swollen, painful, horizontal
Diagnosis: U/S to assess doppler flow / CRP/ESR levels
Ddx: advanced epididymitis (torsion of epididymis)
Treatment: orchiopexy (unsalvageable after 6 hrs) / fix other side too (it may happen there)
Tunica vaginalis lesions
hydrocoele (incomplete closure of tunica vaginalis)
hematocoele
chylocoele
varicoele (18% normal males on L or bilateral pampiniphorm plexus issue)
spermatocoele (semen fills duct)
Testicular infectious disease
pediatrics GNR associated with malformations
under 35 C. trachomatis, N. gonorrhea
over 35 E. Coli, Pseudomonas
granulomatous orchitis
rare, unilateral enlargement / acute, fever, tender / autoimmune / plasma cells (occasional neutrophil) surrounded by rim of lymphocytes, fibroblasts
mumps
20% result in orchitis (may be bilateral) / usu. > 10 yrs old / 70% unilateral / usu. 1wk after
parotitis / mononuclear infiltrate - interstitial, patchy / usually does not cause sterility
tuberculosis
epididymis first, then testis / TB = testicular artery?
syphilis
testis first, then epididymis / sterility occurs secondary to obliterative endarteritis
Testicular cancer
Germ cell tumors (GCT)
Seminomatous (SGCT)
seminoma
spermatocytic seminoma
Non-seminomatous (NSGCT)
embryonal carcinoma
yolk sac tumor
choriocarcinoma
teratoma
Non germ cell tumors
Leydig cell tumor, Sertoli cell tumor
Mixed cell tumors
Testicular lymphoma
General Notes
Presentation: painless mass (most solid testicular masses are malignant), dull ache or active pain (in 10% of cases) from hemorrhage into mass or associated epididymitis
Ddx: hydrocoele, spermatocoele, inguinal hernia, epididymitis, orchitis, trauma, epidermoid cyst, benign tumor
Diagnosis: transillumination (then ultrasound) to distinguish solid from cystic; hCG, aFP are measured only after confirming solid mass; if diagnosed, must assess peri-aortic lymph nodes by CT/MRI (drainage to periaortic nodes and not inguinal nodes) (scan abdomen, pelvis and chest)
Treatment: radiation, chemotherapy, resection
post-chemotherapy leukemia relative risk at 5 yrs (15-25%), which equals absolute risk of 0.5%
treatment-related solid tumors are radiation-related occurring in bladder, pancreas, stomach with latency of ~10 yrs
Germ cell tumors (95%)
- peak incidence 15 - 34 yrs / preceded by intratubal germ cell neoplasia
Seminomatous (50%)
seminomas vs. non-seminomatous GCTs
remain localized
mets via lymphatics first (?then hematogenous to lung)
relatively radiosensitive
usu. have normal tumor markers (hCG and/or aFP elevated in 75% NSGCTs)
Seminoma
most common / 40s / large cells, clear cytoplasm, distinct cell membranes, septated architecture, septal lymphocytic infiltrate
Spermatocytic seminoma - worse prognosis
rare / 60s / indolent / smaller cells and larger seminoma cells / lack of
lymphocytes / more mitoses
Non-seminomatous (NSGCT) (50%)
typical treatment regimen might include cisplatin, etoposide, bleomycin or VBP (vincristine, bleomycin, cisplatinum)
decision whether or not to do RPLND (retroperitoneal lymph node dissection to look for mets); depends on stage and other factors [NEJM]
high hCG, aFP or LDH > 10x normal confers worse prognosis (still can have 50% cure rate) / half-life of aFP is 6 days, β-HCG is 1 day (both markers should be followed with treatment as levels may decrease differently because of production by different populations of tumor cells)
relapse for stage I 20-30% (usu. < 2 yrs, rare after 5 yrs) but still 98% eventually cured
Embryonal carcinoma (15%)
20s / aggressive / variable pattern (alveolar, tubular, glandular) / nodules separated
by slits / most common testicular tumor in infants and children
intra/extracellular globules with aFP and a1-AT (Schiller-Duval bodies)
Choriocarcinoma (<1%)
cyto/syncitiotrophoblastic cells / very aggressive (lymphatic spread) / produce hCG
Rx: MTX
Teratomas (see other) (3-5%)
Mixed NSGCT (35%)
1st - teratoma, embryonal carcinoma, yolk sac tumor w/ hCG syncitiotrophoblast
2nd - “teratocarcinoma” is a teratoma and embryonal carcinoma
3rd - seminoma, embryonal carcinoma
Non-germ cell tumors (5-10%) (sex-cord stromal tumors)
usually benign, may elaborate steroids
Presentation: testicular mass, impotence, gynecomastia, precocious puberty
Leydig cell tumor (interstitial)
/ 10% invade / contain lipochrome pigment, lipid droplets, Reinke crystalloids (needle-like)
Sertoli cell tumor (androblastoma)
recapitulate seminiferous tubules / may secrete hormones (ABP) / 10% invasive
Testicular lymphoma
most common in > 60yrs / diffuse large cell lymphoma
Bladder Cancer
General
90% transitional cell / squamous, adenocarcinoma
Risk factors: males 3x > females / smoking ↑ 2-4x / chronic cyclophosphamide, external beam radiation, aniline dyes, schistosomiasis
Presentation: hematuria, UTI
Diagnosis: urine cytology, cystoscopy
Treatment: resection and chemotherapy (even for local disease!) / BCG vaccine used as intravesicle treatment
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