BMJ 2000;321:789-792 ( 30 September )

Papers

Risk of testicular cancer in men with abnormal semen characteristics: cohort study

Editorial by de Kretser

Rune Jacobsen, researcher aErik Bostofte, consultant bGerda Engholm, senior researcher aJohnni Hansen, researcher cJørgen H Olsen, head of department cNiels E Skakkebæk, professor dHenrik Møller, professor e

a Centre for Research in Health and Social Statistics, Danish National Research Foundation, DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark, b Sperm Analysis Laboratory, Health Service Physicians Organisation, DK-1112 Copenhagen, Denmark, c Institute of Cancer Epidemiology, Danish Cancer Society, Box 839, DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark, d Department of Growth and Reproduction, National University Hospital, DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark, e Thames Cancer Registry, Guy's, King's, and St Thomas' School of Medicine, London SE1 3QD

Correspondence to: Rune Jacobsen, Department of Epidemiology, Institute of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Panum Institute, DK-2200 Copenhagen, Denmark R.jacobsen{at}pubhealth.ku.dk


    Abstract
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Participants and methods
Results
Discussion
References

Objective: To explore the associations between semen characteristics and subsequent risk of testicular cancer.
Design: Cohort study.
Participants: 32 442 men who had a semen analysis done at the Sperm Analysis Laboratory in Copenhagen during 1963-95.
Main outcome measure: Standardised incidence ratios of testicular cancer compared with total population of Danish men.
Results: Men in couples with fertility problems were more likely to develop testicular cancer than other men (89 cases, standardised incidence ratio 1.6; 95% confidence interval 1.3 to 1.9). The risk was relatively constant with increasing time between semen analysis and cancer diagnosis. Analysis according to specific semen characteristics showed that low semen concentration (standardised incidence ratio 2.3), poor motility of the spermatozoa (2.5), and high proportion of morphologically abnormal spermatozoa (3.0) were all associated with an increased risk of testicular cancer. The only other cancer group that showed increased incidence was "peritoneum and other digestive organs" (six cases; 3.7, 1.3 to 8.0). Of these, two cases were probably and two cases were possibly extragonadal germ cell tumours.
Conclusions: The results point towards the existence of common aetiological factors for low semen quality and testicular cancer. Low semen quality may also be associated with increased incidence of extragonadal germ cell tumours.


    Introduction
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Participants and methods
Results
Discussion
References

Over recent decades a possible decrease in semen quality 1 2 and an increase in the incidence of testicular cancer have been reported in many populations.3-5 It is unclear whether these temporal trends are independent phenomena or somehow connected to each other.6-8 Case-control studies on subfertility and subsequent risk of testicular cancer have given conflicting results. 8 9 However, a recent Danish population based cohort study found an increased risk of testicular cancer in men with few children for their age.10 These findings supported the results of an earlier Danish case-control study.8 Both of these Danish studies used the number of children fathered at a given age as the measure of fertility. Thus some men with normal reproductive potential will inevitably have been classified as having low relative fertility because they had no or few children for reasons that were unrelated to their fertility. Subfertility can be measured more directly by analysis of semen for characteristics such as spermatocyte concentration, motility, and morphology. 11 12

Men with testicular cancer often have abnormal semen characteristics, 13 14 but the association between abnormal semen characteristics and testicular cancer has not been investigated prospectively. We studied the incidence of testicular cancer in relation to semen characteristics in 32 442 men who had semen analysis at the Sperm Analysis Laboratory in Copenhagen during 1963-95.


    Participants and methods
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Participants and methods
Results
Discussion
References

We linked information on all men in couples with fertility problems who had a semen analysis done at the Sperm Analysis Laboratory in Copenhagen during 1963-95 (n=32 442) with data in the Danish Cancer Registry, which holds information on all cases of cancer in the Danish population from 1943 to 1995.15 Men who visited the laboratory for other reasons (such as semen analysis after vasectomy) were excluded from the analysis. The Copenhagen laboratory is one of several public semen analysis laboratories in Denmark and examines semen samples mostly from men in the area of Copenhagen. Men are referred to the clinic by general practitioners and urologists, and the investigations are paid for through the public health system. Men with cancer before the date of semen analysis were excluded. For men who had multiple semen tests only their first test was used in the analysis. Similarly, only the first cancer diagnosis in a given man was included in the analysis. The methods used for analysis of semen (sperm concentration and motility and proportion of morphologically abnormal spermatozoa) have been described previously.16 For each man we also obtained information on date of birth, dates of birth of his children, and date of death from the Central Population Register and the National Death Register.

We calculated the expected numbers of cancer cases in the cohort (by multiplying years at risk with primary cancer rates in the Danish population) and standardised incidence ratios and 95% confidence intervals using a Fortran computer program.17 The standardised incidence ratios were calculated for each type of cancer by time since first semen analysis, stratifying by semen characteristics according to standard definitions of subfertility.12 The group of azoospermic men was divided into those with and without children in order to address the possibility that some azoospermic men had not given information on sterilisation or other circumstances resulting in a sudden azoospermia. To examine the separate and joint effects of the three semen characteristics, the cohort was stratified into groups according to their combination of semen measures.


    Results
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Participants and methods
Results
Discussion
References

Overall, the cohort members had an increased risk of testicular cancer and of cancers of the peritoneum and other digestive organs (table 1). Risk of other types of cancer was not increased in the cohort. Eighty nine men developed testicular cancer, giving a standardised incidence ratio of 1.6 (95% confidence interval 1.3 to 1.9). Of these 89 men, 50 had seminomas (standardised incidence ratio 1.5, 1.1 to 1.9), 37 had non-seminomas (1.8, 1.2 to 2.4), and two were unspecified. For cancer of the peritoneum and other digestive organs the standardised incidence ratio was 3.7 (1.3 to 8.0) based on six observed cases. The standardised incidence ratio for cancers of all other sites combined was 1.0 (0.9 to 1.1).


                              
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 

Table 1. Standardised incidence ratios and 95% confidence intervals for different cancers in cohort of 32 442 men having sperm analysis in Copenhagen, 1963-95 


                              
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 

Table 2. Standardised incidence ratios and 95% confidence intervals for testicular cancer, stratified by time since semen analysis

Table 2 shows the standardised incidence ratios for testicular cancer stratified by time between first semen analysis and cancer diagnosis. The highest risk of testicular cancer was in the first two years after the first semen analysis (standardised incidence ratio 1.8). The risk was 1.5-1.6 for two to 11 years after the first semen analysis and 1.3 for more than 11 years since first semen analysis. The trend in the standardised incidence ratios over the four periods of follow up was not significant (P=0.46).

Table 3 shows the standardised incidence ratios of testicular cancer, stratified by measures of semen quality. In univariate analyses, low semen concentration, poor semen mobility, and a high proportion of abnormal spermatozoa were all associated with increased standardised incidence ratios, whereas the groups with normal semen characteristics had standardised incidence ratios closer to unity. The azoospermic men who had fathered children before semen analysis showed lower risk of testicular cancer than azoospermic men without children (standardised incidence ratio 2.0 v 5.3). Men who were not azoospermic but who had sperm concentrations of 20 million/ml or lower had a higher risk of testicular cancer than men with concentrations above 20 million/ml (standardised incidence ratio 2.3 v 1.1).


                              
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 

Table 3. Standardised incidence ratios and 95% confidence intervals for testicular cancer according to semen characteristics

The univariate, separate, and joint effects of the three semen quality measures were analysed in the subgroup of 29 177 men who had some spermatozoa in the semen sample (table 4). The separate effect of low concentration on the risk of testicular cancer was roughly the same as the univariate effect (standardised incidence ratio 2.1 and 2.3, respectively). Of 10 509 men with low semen concentration, 9187 had low concentration as the only abnormal characteristic. Very few men had poor motility only or a high proportion of abnormal spermatozoa only, and no case of testicular cancer was observed in these groups. We therefore could not identify a separate effect of poor motility or of having a high proportion of abnormal spermatozoa. However, the risk of testicular cancer increased with increasing number of subfertility measures present. The standardised incidence ratio was 1.9 for one subfertility measure, 2.7 for two measures, and 9.3 for all three subfertility measures.


                              
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 

Table 4. Separate and joint effects of three semen quality measures on risk of testicular cancer among 29 177 men with some spermatozoa in semen

Table 5 gives the details of the six cases of cancer in the peritoneum and other digestive organs. Case 1 may have had a testicular cancer before his leukaemia, which probably was treatment induced. An extragonadal germ cell tumour is also possible for case 2, who had increased concentrations of tumour markers. The notifications suggest that cases 3 and 5 had extragonadal germ cell tumours. Cases 4 and 6 seemed unlikely to have had extragonadal germ cell cancers.


                              
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 

Table 5. Evaluation of the six cases of cancers of peritoneum and other digestive organs based on notification forms received from Danish Cancer Registry




    Discussion
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Participants and methods
Results
Discussion
References

Our retrospective cohort study, based on more than 30 000 men in infertile couples, found a strong association between subfertility and subsequent risk of testicular cancer. All men of couples with fertility problems were 1.6 times more likely to develop testicular cancer than the Danish male population in general, and the increase was evident for both seminoma and non-seminoma. The overall analysis included some fully fertile men from couples in which only the woman was subfertile, and the observed higher risk of testicular cancer in the cohort overall would be even higher if only subfertile men were included. Men in the cohort with abnormal semen characteristics had a twofold to threefold increased risk. Our findings are consistent with the results of investigations into spermatogenesis in patients with unilateral testicular cancer18 and risk of testicular cancer in men considered subfertile on the basis of a low number of children for their age. 8 10

The observation that men with unilateral testicular cancer have impaired spermatogenesis18 does not preclude the possibility that impaired reproductive capacity is secondary to the cancer. We found that the risk of testicular cancer was relatively constant with increasing time since semen analysis. Impaired spermatogenesis may therefore have been present many years before testicular cancer was diagnosed, pointing towards a permanent state of impaired spermatogenesis.

Our use of semen characteristics to assess subfertility eliminates the misclassification problems in studies based on numbers of children, where men with normal reproductive potential who have no or few children for other reasons may bias the result towards unity. All together, the available data point towards the existence of common risk factors for impaired spermatogenesis and testicular cancer.


What is already known on this topic

The incidence of testicular cancer has increased in the past 50 years, and some evidence suggests that sperm quality has decreased in the same period

Common aetiological factors may exist for testicular cancer and male subfertility

What this study adds

This study confirms that incidence of testicular cancer is increased in men with few children for their age

The association between testicular cancer and abnormal semen characteristics is statistically robust and consistent with the hypothesis of a common aetiology

Abnormal semen characteristics may be associated with extragonadal germ cell tumours

Some evidence suggests that testicular cancer has its origin in fetal life. Incidence of testicular cancer is lower among men born during the second world war than men born before and after the war in Denmark, Norway, and Sweden.19-21 Other risk factors for testicular cancer, such as low birth weight22 and congenital malformations of the testes, 23 24 also support a fetal origin for testicular cancer. In addition, carcinoma in situ (the precursor of both seminomas and non-seminomas) has several characteristics in common with fetal germ cells.25 The specific aetiological factors in testicular cancer are unknown, but maternal oestrogens and hormonal disrupting agents have been proposed as causal factors acting on the male fetus. 26 27

We also found an increased risk of cancer of the peritoneum and other digestive organs. One explanation for this association is that some of the observed cancers in this category were misclassified testicular or extragonadal germ cell tumours. Extragonadal germ cell tumours have been associated with testicular carcinoma in situ, 28 29 suggesting a common aetiology with testicular cancer.

From a public health perspective, our study provides some reassurance to men identified with abnormal semen characteristics, despite the increased relative risks. The absolute excess of cancers is about 36 cases per 32 442 men followed for 297 750 person years. The absolute increase in risk for the individual is therefore very small.

    Acknowledgments

   Contributors: RJ was responsible for the study design, data collection, statistical analysis, interpretation, and reporting and is the guarantor. EB, GE, JH, JHO, NES, and HM contributed to the study design, data collection, interpretation, and reporting.

    Footnotes

Funding: Danish Research Councils.

Competing interests: None declared.

This article is part of the BMJ's randomised controlled trial of open peer review. Documentation relating to the editorial decision making process is available on the BMJ's website


    References
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Participants and methods
Results
Discussion
References

1. Carlsen E, Giwercman A, Keiding N, Skakkebæk NE. Evidence for decreasing quality of semen during past 50 years. BMJ 1992; 305: 609-613.
2. Swan SH, Elkin EP, Fenster L. Have sperm densities declined? A reanalysis of global trend data. Environ Health Perspect 1997; 105: 1228-1232[Medline].
3. Coleman MP, Esteve J, Damiecki P, Arslan A, Renard H. Trends in cancer incidence and mortality. Lyons: International Agency for Research on Cancer, 1993. (IARC Scientific Publication No 121.)
4. Forman D, Møller H. Testicular cancer. Cancer Surv 1994; 19-20: 323-341.
5. Adami HO, Bergström R, Mohner M, Zatonski W, Storm H, Ekbom A, et al. Testicular cancer in nine northern European countries. Int J Cancer 1994; 59: 33-38[Medline].
6. James WH. Secular trends in monitors of reproductive hazard. Hum Reprod 1997; 12: 417-421.
7. Møller H. Trends in sex-ratio, testicular cancer and male reproductive hazards: are they connected? APMIS 1998; 106: 232-239[Medline].
8. Møller H, Skakkebæk NE. Risk of testicular cancer in subfertile men: case-control study. BMJ 1999; 318: 559-562[Abstract/Free Full Text].
9. Swerdlow AJ, Huttly SR, Smith PG. Testis cancer: post-natal hormonal factors, sexual behaviour and fertility. Int J Cancer 1989; 43: 549-553[Medline].
10. Jabsen R, Antoniades B, Bostofte E, Engholm G, Hansen J, Skakkebaek NE, et al. Fertility and offspring sex ratio of men who develop testicular cancer: a record linkage study. Hum Reprod 2000; 15: 1958-1961[Abstract/Free Full Text].
11. Bostofte E, Serup J, Rebbe H. Interrelations among the characteristics of human semen, and a new system for classification of male infertility. Fertil Steril 1989; 41: 95-102.
12. World Health Organization. Laboratory manual for examination of human semen and sperm-cervical mucus interaction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999.
13. Nijman JM, Schraffordt Koops H, Kremer J, Willemse PHB, Sleijfer DT, Oldhoff J. Fertility and hormonal function in patients with nonseminomatous tumor of the testis. Arch Andrology 1985; 14: 239-246[Medline].
14. Carroll P, Whitmore Jr WF, Herr HW, Morse MJ, Sogani PC, Bajorunas D, et al. Endocrine and exocrine profiles of men with testicular tumors before orchidectomy. J Urol 1987; 137: 420-423[Medline].
15. Storm HH. The Danish Cancer Registry, a self-reporting national cancer registration system with elements of active data collection. Lyons: International Agency for Research on Cancer, 1991:220-236. (IARC Scientific Publication No 95.)
16. Bostofte E, Bagger P, Michael A, Stakemann G. Fertility prognosis for infertile men: results of follow-up study of semen analysis in infertile men from two different populations evaluated by the Cox regression model. Fertil Steril 1990; 54: 1100-1106[Medline].
17. Coleman M, Douglas A, Hermon C, Peto J. Cohort study analysis with a Fortran computer program. Int J Epidemiol 1986; 15: 134-137[Abstract/Free Full Text].
18. Berthelsen JG, Skakkebæk NE. Gonadal function in men with testis cancer. Fertil Steril 1983; 39: 68-75[Medline].
19. Møller H. Clues to the aetiology of testicular germ cell tumours from descriptive epidemiology. Eur Urol 1993; 23: 8-13.
20. Bergström R, Adami HO, Mohner M, Zatonski W, Storm H, Ekbom A, et al. Increase in testicular cancer incidence in six European countries: a birth cohort phenomenon. J Natl Cancer Inst 1996; 88: 727-733[Abstract/Free Full Text].
21. Wanderås EH, Grotmol T, Fossa SD, Tretli S. Maternal health and pre- and perinatal characteristics in the etiology of testicular cancer: a prospective population- and register-based study on Norwegian males born between 1967 and 1995. Cancer Causes Control 1998; 9: 475-486[CrossRef][Medline].
22. Møller H, Skakkebæk NE. Testicular cancer and cryptorchidism in relation to prenatal factors: case-control studies in Denmark. Cancer Causes Control 1997; 8: 904-912[CrossRef][Medline].
23. United Kingdom Testicular Cancer Study Group. Aetiology of testicular cancer: association with congenital abnormalities, age at puberty, infertility, and exercise. BMJ 1994; 308: 1393-1399[Abstract/Free Full Text].
24. Møller H, Prener A, Skakkebæk NE. Testicular cancer, cryptorchidism, inguinal hernia, testicular atrophy, and genital malformations: Case control studies in Denmark. Cancer Causes Control 1995; 7: 264-274.
25. Skakkebæk NE, Berthelsen JG, Giwercman A, Müller J. Carcinoma-in-situ of the testis: possible origin from gonocytes and precursor of all types of germ cell tumors except spermacytoma. Int J Andrology 1987; 10: 19-28[Medline].
26. Sharpe RM, Skakkebaek NE. Are oestrogens involved in falling sperm counts and disorders of the male reproductive tract? Lancet 1993; 341: 1392-1395[CrossRef][Medline].
27. Henderson BE, Benton B, Jing J, Yu MC, Pike MC. Risk factors for cancer of the testis in young men. Int J Cancer 1979; 23: 598-602[Medline].
28. Daugaard G, Rorth M, von der Maase H, Skakkebaek NE. Management of extragonadal germ-cell tumors and the significance of bilateral testicular biopsies. Ann Oncol 1992; 3: 283-289[Abstract/Free Full Text].
29. Daugaard G, von der Maase H, Olsen J, Rorth M, Skakkebaek NE. Carcinoma-in-situ testis in patients with assumed extragonadal germ-cell tumours. Lancet 1987; ii: 528-530.

(Accepted 19 June 2000)


© BMJ 2000

Add to CiteULike CiteULike   Add to Complore Complore   Add to Connotea Connotea   Add to Del.icio.us Del.icio.us   Add to Digg Digg   Add to Reddit Reddit   Add to StumbleUpon StumbleUpon   Add to Technorati Technorati    What's this?

Relevant Articles

Abnormal semen characteristics increase risk of testicular cancer
BMJ 2000 321: 0. [Full Text]

Testicular cancer and infertility
DM de Kretser
BMJ 2000 321: 781-782. [Extract] [Full Text] [PDF]

This article has been cited by other articles:

  • Akre, O., Richiardi, L. (2009). Does a testicular dysgenesis syndrome exist?. Hum Reprod 24: 2053-2060 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Jensen, T. K., Jacobsen, R., Christensen, K., Nielsen, N. C., Bostofte, E. (2009). Good Semen Quality and Life Expectancy: A Cohort Study of 43,277 Men. Am J Epidemiol 170: 559-565 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Horvath, A., Korde, L., Greene, M. H., Libe, R., Osorio, P., Faucz, F. R., Raffin-Sanson, M. L., Tsang, K. M., Drori-Herishanu, L., Patronas, Y., Remmers, E. F., Nikita, M. E., Moran, J., Greene, J., Nesterova, M., Merino, M., Bertherat, J., Stratakis, C. A. (2009). Functional Phosphodiesterase 11A Mutations May Modify the Risk of Familial and Bilateral Testicular Germ Cell Tumors. Cancer Res. 69: 5301-5306 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Walsh, T. J., Croughan, M. S., Schembri, M., Chan, J. M., Turek, P. J. (2009). Increased Risk of Testicular Germ Cell Cancer Among Infertile Men. Arch Intern Med 169: 351-356 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Carmignani, L., Gadda, F., Gazzano, G., Ragni, G., Paffoni, A., Rocco, F., Colpi, G. M. (2007). Testicular sperm extraction in cancerous testicle in patients with azoospermia: A Case Report. Hum Reprod 22: 1068-1072 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Mancini, M., Carmignani, L., Gazzano, G., Sagone, P., Gadda, F., Bosari, S., Rocco, F., Colpi, G.M. (2007). High prevalence of testicular cancer in azoospermic men without spermatogenesis. Hum Reprod 22: 1042-1046 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • McLachlan, R.I., Rajpert-De Meyts, E., Hoei-Hansen, C.E., de Kretser, D.M., Skakkebaek, N.E. (2007). Histological evaluation of the human testis--approaches to optimizing the clinical value of the assessment: Mini Review. Hum Reprod 22: 2-16 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Rajpert-De Meyts, E. (2006). Developmental model for the pathogenesis of testicular carcinoma in situ: genetic and environmental aspects. Hum Reprod Update 12: 303-323 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Pauls, K., Schorle, H., Jeske, W., Brehm, R., Steger, K., Wernert, N., Buttner, R., Zhou, H. (2006). Spatial expression of germ cell markers during maturation of human fetal male gonads: an immunohistochemical study. Hum Reprod 21: 397-404 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Sutcliffe, A., Spoudeas, H. A., Nair, D., Bouloux, P., Oliver, T., Sambrook, P., Bannister, W., Lambalk, C. B., Spector, T. (2006). Comparison of serum FSH and Inhibin B levels between adult male dizygotic and monozygotic twins. Hum Reprod 21: 447-450 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Richiardi, L., Akre, O. (2005). Fertility Among Brothers of Patients with Testicular Cancer. Cancer Epidemiol. Biomarkers Prev. 14: 2557-2562 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Richiardi, L., Bellocco, R., Adami, H.-O., Torrang, A., Barlow, L., Hakulinen, T., Rahu, M., Stengrevics, A., Storm, H., Tretli, S., Kurtinaitis, J., Tyczynski, J. E., Akre, O. (2004). Testicular Cancer Incidence in Eight Northern European Countries: Secular and Recent Trends. Cancer Epidemiol. Biomarkers Prev. 13: 2157-2166 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Richiardi, L., Akre, O., Montgomery, S. M., Lambe, M., Kvist, U., Ekbom, A. (2004). Fecundity and Twinning Rates as Measures of Fertility Before Diagnosis of Germ-Cell Testicular Cancer. JNCI J Natl Cancer Inst 96: 145-147 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Frydelund-Larsen, L., Vogt, P. H., Leffers, H., Schadwinkel, A., Daugaard, G., Skakkebaek, N. E., Rajpert-De Meyts, E. (2003). No AZF deletion in 160 patients with testicular germ cell neoplasia. Mol Hum Reprod 9: 517-521 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Gandini, L., Lombardo, F., Salacone, P., Paoli, D., Anselmo, A. P., Culasso, F., Dondero, F., Lenzi, A. (2003). Testicular cancer and Hodgkin's disease: evaluation of semen quality. Hum Reprod 18: 796-801 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Maduro, M.R., Casella, R., Kim, E., Levy, N., Niederberger, C., Lipshultz, L.I., Lamb, D.J. (2003). Microsatellite instability and defects in mismatch repair proteins: a new aetiology for Sertoli cell-only syndrome. Mol Hum Reprod 9: 61-68 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Gaskell, T. L., Robinson, L. L. L., Groome, N. P., Anderson, R. A., Saunders, P. T. K. (2003). Differential Expression of Two Estrogen Receptor {beta} Isoforms in the Human Fetal Testis during the Second Trimester of Pregnancy. J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 88: 424-432 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Skakkebak, N.E., Rajpert-De Meyts, E., Main, K.M. (2001). Testicular dysgenesis syndrome: an increasingly common developmental disorder with environmental aspects: Opinion. Hum Reprod 16: 972-978 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Lifschitz-Mercer, B., Elliott, D. J., Schreiber-Bramante, L., Leider-Trejo, L., Eisenthal, A., Maymon, B. B.-S. (2001). Intratubular Germ Cell Neoplasia: Associated Infertility and Review of the Diagnostic Modalities. INT J SURG PATHOL 9: 93-98 [Abstract]  
  • (2000). Semen Quality and Testicular Cancer. JWatch General 2000: 8-8 [Full text]  
  • de Kretser, D. (2000). Testicular cancer and infertility. BMJ 321: 781-782 [Full text]  

Rapid Responses:

Read all Rapid Responses

Age confounds testicular cancer study
Wai-Ching Leung
bmj.com, 29 Sep 2000 [Full text]
Reply to Dr. Wai-Ching Leung
Rune Jacobsen
bmj.com, 2 Oct 2000 [Full text]
Sperm counts
David Greenman
bmj.com, 2 Oct 2000 [Full text]
Could this mean a link between varicocele and testicular cancer?
E Robinson
bmj.com, 4 Oct 2000 [Full text]
Increased evidence for routine ultrasound examination in male infertility patients.
S Gordon, et al.
bmj.com, 11 Oct 2000 [Full text]



Access jobs at BMJ Careers
Whats new online at Student 

BMJ