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Erschienen in: African Journal of Urology 1/2021

Open Access 01.12.2021 | Case Reports

Testicular epidermoid cyst: about a case report and a review of the literature

verfasst von: Amine Saouli, Tarik Karmouni, Khalid El Khader, Abdellatif Koutani, Ahmed Iben Attya Andaloussi

Erschienen in: African Journal of Urology | Ausgabe 1/2021

Abstract

Background

The testicular epidermoid cyst is an exceptional benign tumor. The presumptive diagnosis is facilitated by the development of medical imaging (echo-Doppler, elastography, contrast-enhanced ultrasound, MRI). The confirmatory diagnosis is histological.

Case presentation

We report the case report of a 37-year-old man who had a history of repetitive orchitis. He had complained of right scrotal discomfort for 6 months with no associated urinary symptoms. We performed an extemporaneous biopsy given the uncertain diagnosis (Fig. 3), and the histological examination was in favor of a mature teratoma. This prompted us to perform a right orchidectomy. The postoperative was simple. The final histological examination tipped in favor of an epidermoid cyst of the testicle. The patient was seen again at one month, and his clinical examination was normal.

Conclusion

The testicular epidermal cyst is a rare benign tumor of the testicle. Currently, conservative surgery has become the gold standard thanks to the development of medical imaging to differentiate between the both forms of TEC, and it retains certain limits which lie in the differential diagnosis with the teratoma requiring large multicenter studies to better characterize these two entities.
Hinweise

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Abkürzungen
TEC
Testicular epidermoid cyst
MRI
Magnetic resonance imaging
hCG
Human chorionic gonadotropin

1 Background

The testicular epidermoid cyst (TEC) is a rare, non-teratomatous benign tumor. Accordingly, clinical management has been a matter of controversy. It has been hypothesized that two different types of TECs exist.
The development of medical imaging has radically changed the management of the TEC from the orchidectomy to a conservative treatment and also made it possible to make the differentiation diagnosis with the teratoma.
This case report is a new observation whose interest lies in the benignity of the cyst and especially its preoperative distinction with the teratoma for testicular conservation.

2 Case presentation

A 37-year-old man had a history of repetitive orchitis. He had complained of right scrotal discomfort for 6 months with no associated urinary symptoms.
A clinical examination showed the presence of a firm, regular, oval, painless and non-inflammatory right testicular swelling.
Scrotal ultrasound objectified a large oval formation, occupying almost the entire testicle which measures 65 mm in regular contours, well limited, of echostructure substantially hypoechoic, finely heterogeneous, full of microcalcifications and avascular (Fig. 1).
Scrotal MRI revealed the presence of a cystic testicular mass (Fig. 2).
The tumor markers (alpha fetoprotein, lactate dehydrogenase and choriogonadic hormone) were normal.
We performed an extemporaneous biopsy given the uncertain diagnosis (Fig. 3), and the histological examination was in favor of a mature teratoma. This prompted us to perform a right orchidectomy. The postoperative was simple.
The final histological examination tipped in favor of an epidermoid cyst of the testicle. The patient was seen again at one month, and his clinical examination was normal.

3 Discussion

The testicular epidermoid cyst was first described in 1942 by Dockerty and Prestly, generally well circumscribed, of germinal origin, representing about 1% of all testicular tumors, and these tumors can occur at any age, but are more common in the second to fourth decades [1, 2]. Squamous cysts can be multiple or bilateral [3].
The usual clinical presentation is a chance discovery of a painless testicular mass, the right side being the predominant side [4].
Four theories [58] have been studied describing the potential etiology of testicular epidermoid cysts. First, several studies have claimed that these cysts are of teratomatous origin originating from a monodermal proliferation of epidermal cells. A second theory supported is described as a metaplasia of the epidermal cells of the rete testis secondary to an obstruction of the epidermal tube. However, the different locations of the reported cysts do not support this theory. The third is the development of epidermoid cysts from the keratinization of the rete testis. This theory does not describe the development of squamous metaplasia of the epithelium seen on histology. Finally, the fourth theory is the movement of squamous cells derived from embryological skin from the scrotum to the testes. However, there is still a lack of evidence to support this theory.
An ultrasound classification can be considered useful for classifying the histological type of testicular tumors [9] (Table 1).
Table 1
Anatomo-radiological classification of testicular tumors
 
Hypervascular
Hypovascular
Avascular
Type I: elliptical to lobular nodular lesion
SGCT
Leidygom
PTT
EC
Type II: scattered diffuse lesion
SGCT
LHT
  
Type III: lesion containing an internal cystic component
NSGCT
SGCT
NSGCT
NSGCT
Type IV: lesion containing echogenic foci
NSGCT
NSGCT
 
Type V: lesion mixed with cystic components and echogenic foci
NSGCT
NSGCT
EC
Type VI: an extra-albuginal lesion
 
PTT
 
SGCT seminomatous germ cell tumor, NSGCT non-seminomatous germ cell tumor, LHT lymphoid and hematopoietic tumors, EC epidermoid cyst, PTT paratesticular tumors
In the Chang et al., the results indicated that epidermoid cysts were statistically more frequently associated with smaller tumor size and mainly cystic components. Teratomas are complex tumors derived from the three layers of germs, including the endoderm, mesoderm and ectoderm. The current hypothesis holds that although the histogenesis of epidermoid cysts is controversial, monodermal teratomas can occur without endodermal or mesodermal components. This hypothesis could explain the considerable similarities between epidermoid cysts and teratomas when evaluated by ultrasound [10].
In MRI, an epidermoid cyst usually shows a low intensity with a focus of the intermediate central signal on the T1-weighted images and appears as a mass of high heterogeneous signal intensity surrounded by a rim of low signal intensity on the T2-weighted images. A low signal strength peripheral rim was noted on the T1- and T2-weighted images, which gave a target appearance. Because the lesion is avascular, no improvement in contrast is expected after administration of contrast [11].
Four histological criteria are established to confirm the diagnosis of TEC: (a) The lesion must be located in the testicular parenchyma; (b) the composition of the central cyst must consist of keratinized debris of the amorphous material; (c) inside the cyst, teratoids or components of the dermal appendages should not exist; and (d) there should be no scars in the parenchyma adjacent to the epidermoid cyst [1216].
The management of epidermoid cysts has evolved over the past decade, with the previous standard of orchidectomy having been replaced by conservative enucleation or keyed resection in cases with characteristic radiological features and negative tumor markers. Tumor markers (alpha fetoproteins and beta hCG) are always normal in case of isolated TEC [17].
Epidermal cells, unlike teratomatous lesions, are benign, do not metastasize and do not reproduce.
No reported cases of local recurrence or metastasis have been found in the literature, so conservative attitude has recently become the treatment of choice. This treatment method requires a partial orchidectomy followed by an extemporaneous biopsy to exclude the malignancy. If the pathology is reported as benign, the procedure can be terminated; however, if the final pathology describes a teratoma or malignant pathology, a radical orchidectomy is necessary [18, 19].
Conservative surgery depends mainly on the type of epidermoid cyst. They can occur in two different forms, the benign subtype called “simple TEC” and the other subtype representing an epidermoid cyst that occurs in association with invasive germ cell tumors (GCNIS) called “complex TEC” [20].

4 Conclusion

The testicular epidermal cyst is a rare benign tumor of the testicle.
Currently, conservative surgery has become the gold standard thanks to the development of medical imaging to differentiate between the both forms of TEC, and it retains certain limits which lie in the differential diagnosis with the teratoma requiring large multicenter studies to better characterize these two entities.

Acknowledgements

Not applicable.
The patient gave his verbal consent to participate in this study. The ethics committee of faculty of medicine of Rabat gave us a verbal agreement. The reference number is not applicable.
The patient gave his informed and free consent for the publication of this study. That proof of consent to publish from study participant can be requested at any time.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest in connection with this article.
Open AccessThis article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://​creativecommons.​org/​licenses/​by/​4.​0/​.

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Metadaten
Titel
Testicular epidermoid cyst: about a case report and a review of the literature
verfasst von
Amine Saouli
Tarik Karmouni
Khalid El Khader
Abdellatif Koutani
Ahmed Iben Attya Andaloussi
Publikationsdatum
01.12.2021
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Erschienen in
African Journal of Urology / Ausgabe 1/2021
Print ISSN: 1110-5704
Elektronische ISSN: 1961-9987
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12301-021-00135-z

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