Testicular cancer diagnosis may involve an exam, ultrasound, blood test and/or biopsy. Staging may require more tests and the stages do not include a stage 4.
Testicular cancer is not common but it is the leading cause of cancer in young men. Learn what it is, the causes and risk factors.
The most common treatment for testicular cancer is surgery, but options vary by disease type, stage and patient health. Learn about treatments and survival rate.
Thanks to our testicular cancer support services, including fertility preservation and sexual health, City of Hope consistently ranks highly in patient satisfaction.
When standard treatments stop working, City of Hope can tap its testicular cancer clinical trials for novel therapies and techniques. Learn more!
City of Hope's Center for International Medicine partners with like-minded institutions to expand and advance treatment of cancer and diabetes worldwide.
Most testicular lumps are not cancerous. Learn possible causes of a lump on the testicle or scrotal mass and the differences between a cyst and cancer.
The most common type of testicular cancer is a germ cell tumor. Learn about seminoma, non-seminoma and other types of the disease.
Many men will not experience any symptoms of testicular cancer. Learn what it may look or feel like, if it hurts and possible signs.
Patients with testicular cancer may require RPLND surgery. Learn about the retroperitoneal lymph node dissection procedure, recovery and side effects.