Ultrasound morphological patterns of testicular tumours, correlation with histopathology

Abstract Introduction Ultrasound (US) plays a key role in the detection of testicular tumours. However, reliable characterisation of testicular tumours with US is difficult. The purpose of this study was to investigate the morphological patterns of testicular tumours as seen on modern US imaging and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Martin Necas, Muthappan Muthupalaniappaan, Cecilia Barnard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-03-01
Series:Journal of Medical Radiation Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/jmrs.426
id doaj-b6ff3f376abb47cba25c98e69768f9ae
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b6ff3f376abb47cba25c98e69768f9ae2021-02-18T12:32:13ZengWileyJournal of Medical Radiation Sciences2051-38952051-39092021-03-01681212710.1002/jmrs.426Ultrasound morphological patterns of testicular tumours, correlation with histopathologyMartin Necas0Muthappan Muthupalaniappaan1Cecilia Barnard2Department of Ultrasound, Radiology Waikato Hospital Hamilton New ZealandDepartment of Ultrasound, Radiology Waikato Hospital Hamilton New ZealandDepartment of Ultrasound, Radiology Waikato Hospital Hamilton New ZealandAbstract Introduction Ultrasound (US) plays a key role in the detection of testicular tumours. However, reliable characterisation of testicular tumours with US is difficult. The purpose of this study was to investigate the morphological patterns of testicular tumours as seen on modern US imaging and correlate these with histology. Methods The imaging features of 50 testicular tumours were analysed and compared with histology. The US appearance was categorized into 15 distinct morphological patterns. Results Patient’s age ranged from 0.5 to 85 years. Of the 50 tumours in our series, 49 were malignant. Nearly half of the malignancies were seminomatous germ cell tumours (SGCTs). Tumours ranged in size from 10 to 130 mm with considerable overlap of size between tumours of different histological type. Even small (10 mm) tumours in our cohort were malignant. SGCTs demonstrated a narrower range of morphological appearances than non‐seminomatous germ cell tumours (NSGCTs). Calcification was common in both SGCT and NSGCTs. Multicomponent cystic‐solid appearance was only seen in NSGCTs. Conclusion The differentiation of testicular tumours with US continues to be challenging. In this paper, we have demonstrated the diverse morphological patterns of testicular neoplasms and have proposed the study of tumour morphological features as a promising research direction.https://doi.org/10.1002/jmrs.426Scrotumtestistumourultrasound
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Martin Necas
Muthappan Muthupalaniappaan
Cecilia Barnard
spellingShingle Martin Necas
Muthappan Muthupalaniappaan
Cecilia Barnard
Ultrasound morphological patterns of testicular tumours, correlation with histopathology
Journal of Medical Radiation Sciences
Scrotum
testis
tumour
ultrasound
author_facet Martin Necas
Muthappan Muthupalaniappaan
Cecilia Barnard
author_sort Martin Necas
title Ultrasound morphological patterns of testicular tumours, correlation with histopathology
title_short Ultrasound morphological patterns of testicular tumours, correlation with histopathology
title_full Ultrasound morphological patterns of testicular tumours, correlation with histopathology
title_fullStr Ultrasound morphological patterns of testicular tumours, correlation with histopathology
title_full_unstemmed Ultrasound morphological patterns of testicular tumours, correlation with histopathology
title_sort ultrasound morphological patterns of testicular tumours, correlation with histopathology
publisher Wiley
series Journal of Medical Radiation Sciences
issn 2051-3895
2051-3909
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Abstract Introduction Ultrasound (US) plays a key role in the detection of testicular tumours. However, reliable characterisation of testicular tumours with US is difficult. The purpose of this study was to investigate the morphological patterns of testicular tumours as seen on modern US imaging and correlate these with histology. Methods The imaging features of 50 testicular tumours were analysed and compared with histology. The US appearance was categorized into 15 distinct morphological patterns. Results Patient’s age ranged from 0.5 to 85 years. Of the 50 tumours in our series, 49 were malignant. Nearly half of the malignancies were seminomatous germ cell tumours (SGCTs). Tumours ranged in size from 10 to 130 mm with considerable overlap of size between tumours of different histological type. Even small (10 mm) tumours in our cohort were malignant. SGCTs demonstrated a narrower range of morphological appearances than non‐seminomatous germ cell tumours (NSGCTs). Calcification was common in both SGCT and NSGCTs. Multicomponent cystic‐solid appearance was only seen in NSGCTs. Conclusion The differentiation of testicular tumours with US continues to be challenging. In this paper, we have demonstrated the diverse morphological patterns of testicular neoplasms and have proposed the study of tumour morphological features as a promising research direction.
topic Scrotum
testis
tumour
ultrasound
url https://doi.org/10.1002/jmrs.426
work_keys_str_mv AT martinnecas ultrasoundmorphologicalpatternsoftesticulartumourscorrelationwithhistopathology
AT muthappanmuthupalaniappaan ultrasoundmorphologicalpatternsoftesticulartumourscorrelationwithhistopathology
AT ceciliabarnard ultrasoundmorphologicalpatternsoftesticulartumourscorrelationwithhistopathology
_version_ 1724263016447344640