Sociedad Americana de Hirudoterapia

Thromboembolic disease in testicular germ cell tumors-real-world evidence of three Portuguese institutions

Research article published in Frontiers in oncology (2026)

Última actualización: June 18, 2026Revisado por: ASH Editorial Board
Research article — evidence reviewArticle reference
Evidence: Research reportEnsayos clínicosSeguridad y control de infeccionesAlbuquerque J et al. · Frontiers in oncology, 2026

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Testicular germ cell tumors (TGCTs) are highly curable malignancies with long-term overall survival (OS) exceeding 90%. Thromboembolic (TE) events are a relevant treatment-related complication, reported in approximately 10% of patients. This study aimed to evaluate the incidence, risk factors, and prognostic impact of TE in TGCT. METHODS: We performed a retrospective multicenter cohort study including 136 post-pubertal male patients with histologically confirmed TGCT treated between 2007 and 2021 at three Portuguese centers. The primary endpoint was to characterize the population of TGCT patients with TE. Secondary endpoints included TE incidence and its impact on OS and progression-free survival (PFS). Identification of clinical, pathological, and treatment-related factors associated with increased TE risk was an exploratory endpoint. RESULTS: Seven patients (5.1%) developed a TE event, all in advanced/recurrent disease (14.6% in this subgroup). No TE occurred in stage I patients, including those treated with adjuvant chemotherapy. Visceral metastases (pulmonary and extra-pulmonary) and poor IGCCCG prognosis were associated with TE (p < 0.05). All TE patients had a central venous catheter (CVC), although only two had catheter-related thrombosis (p = 0.019). For advanced stages, survival outcomes did not differ significantly, with 5-year OS of 71.4% vs. 86.2% (p = 0.22) and PFS of 47.6% vs. 75.5% (p = 0.23) in TE versus non-TE groups, respectively. Most events (86%) occurred within 30 days of chemotherapy initiation, with pulmonary embolism as the most frequent presentation. Neither the Khorana nor the ONKOTEV scores predicted TE. DISCUSSION: TE in TGCT occurred only in patients with advanced disease, was linked to tumor burden and CVC use, and was not predicted by current models. These findings highlight the need for TGCT-specific risk tools and prospective studies on risk-adapted prophylaxis.

Abstract sourced from PubMed (NCBI) for the cited record. See the original publication for the authoritative version.

Publication typeJournal Article

Resumen

Testicular germ cell tumors (TGCTs) are highly curable malignancies with long-term overall survival (OS) exceeding 90%. Thromboembolic (TE) events are a relevant treatment-related complication, reported in approximately 10% of patients.

Por qué esto importa para la hirudoterapia

Esta cohorte retrospectiva multicéntrica de 136 pacientes con tumores de células germinales testiculares en tres centros portugueses encontró eventos tromboembólicos en un 5,1% global (14,6% en enfermedad avanzada/recurrente, ninguno en estadio I), asociados con metástasis viscerales, mal pronóstico según IGCCCG y el uso de catéteres venosos centrales, ocurriendo la mayoría de los eventos dentro de los 30 días posteriores a la quimioterapia; ni las escalas de Khorana ni de ONKOTEV los predijeron. Para ASH, el vínculo es temático: se suma a la literatura sobre trombosis asociada al cáncer que define el espacio del problema clínico en el cual se sitúan conceptualmente los agentes antitrombóticos, incluidos los candidatos derivados de sanguijuelas. Advertencia honesta: se trata de una cohorte observacional pequeña de una sola enfermedad con solo siete eventos, centrada en la epidemiología de la trombosis y la predicción del riesgo más que en el tratamiento; no involucra sanguijuelas, no realiza ninguna afirmación sobre la hirudoterapia y no respalda ninguna inferencia sobre la terapia basada en sanguijuelas.

Citación

Thromboembolic disease in testicular germ cell tumors-real-world evidence of three Portuguese institutions.

Albuquerque J et al. · Frontiers in oncology, 2026

Contexto clínico relacionado

Añadido a la biblioteca ASH: May 28, 2026 · Última actualización del sitio: June 18, 2026

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