Testicular Cancer Treatment
Testicular Cancer

Expert Testicular Cancer
Treatment in Faridabad

Highly curable germ cell tumour treatment with BEP (bleomycin, etoposide, cisplatin) chemotherapy and EP regimens — expertly managed by Dr. Novak Gupta, Senior Medical Oncologist.

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Sector 88Greater Faridabad
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DM OncologyAdvanced Specialization
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NCCN / ASCOInternational Protocols
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Precision MedicineGenomic Profiling
5000+ PatientsSuccessfully Treated
Testicular Cancer Treatment treatment
95%+
Overall Cure Rate

What is Testicular Cancer?

Testicular cancer is the most common solid tumour in young men aged 15–35 and is one of the most curable cancers — overall survival exceeds 95%. It arises from germ cells in the testis, divided into seminoma (~55%) and non-seminomatous germ cell tumours (NSGCTs — ~45%, including embryonal carcinoma, yolk sac tumour, choriocarcinoma, and teratoma). Tumour markers — AFP (alpha-fetoprotein), beta-HCG, and LDH — are essential for diagnosis, staging, and monitoring. BEP (bleomycin, etoposide, cisplatin) chemotherapy is the gold-standard treatment for metastatic disease with outstanding cure rates even at Stage III.

Most curable: One of the most curable cancers — even Stage III disease is cured in majority of patients
Peak age: 15–35 years; bilateral in 2–3% of cases
Subtypes: Seminoma (~55%) and Non-seminomatous germ cell tumours (NSGCT ~45%)
Markers: AFP, beta-HCG, LDH — essential for diagnosis, staging, and treatment monitoring

Symptoms & Early Signs

Early recognition of symptoms leads to timely diagnosis and significantly better treatment outcomes. Do not ignore these warning signs.

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Painless Testicular Lump

A painless hard lump or swelling in one testicle — the classic and most common presenting symptom of testicular cancer.

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Testicular Heaviness

A dull ache or feeling of heaviness in the scrotum or lower abdomen — often present before a distinct lump is noted.

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Gynecomastia

Breast enlargement or tenderness in young men — caused by beta-HCG secretion from choriocarcinoma component.

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Back Pain

Persistent lower back or flank pain from retroperitoneal lymph node enlargement in Stage II/III disease.

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Breathlessness

Shortness of breath or cough from pulmonary metastases — common in advanced NSGCT with lung involvement.

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Fatigue & Weight Loss

Systemic symptoms of metastatic germ cell tumour — weight loss, fatigue, and night sweats in advanced disease.

Causes & Risk Factors

Understanding risk factors helps in early detection and prevention. Consult Dr. Gupta if you are at elevated risk.

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Cryptorchidism (Undescended Testis)

The single strongest risk factor — men with undescended testis have a 3–10× increased risk even after orchidopexy.

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Prior Testicular Cancer

Men with a history of testicular cancer in one testis have a 12× higher risk in the contralateral testis.

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Family History

First-degree relatives (father or brother) with testicular cancer confer a 4–6× increased risk.

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Klinefelter Syndrome

46XXY Klinefelter syndrome is associated with mediastinal non-seminomatous germ cell tumours.

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Infertility

Men with conditions causing infertility (e.g. testicular atrophy) have higher testicular cancer risk.

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Ethnicity

White men have 5× higher testicular cancer incidence than Black men; rising incidence globally.

Risk factors

Monthly Testicular Self-Examination — Detect Early, Cure Guaranteed

Monthly testicular self-examination — best done after a warm shower when the scrotum is relaxed — can detect a painless lump early when treatment is most effective. Any new scrotal lump should be evaluated with an ultrasound within days.

Ready to Take the First Step?

Book a consultation with Dr. Novak Gupta today. Expert oncology care is just a call away.

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