Penile & Scrotal Path - Pointy & Pouchy Problems
- Penile Inflammatory Conditions:
- Balanitis: Inflammation of glans.
- Balanoposthitis: Inflammation of glans & prepuce.
- Phimosis: Inability to retract prepuce. Paraphimosis: Retracted prepuce cannot be returned (⚠️ emergency).
- Penile Premalignant Lesions (Often HPV-related, esp. HPV 16):
- Bowen's Disease: SCC in situ on shaft/scrotum; grey-white plaque.
- Erythroplasia of Queyrat: SCC in situ on glans/prepuce; single/multiple red, velvety plaques.
- Bowenoid Papulosis: Younger patients; multiple reddish-brown papules; rarely progresses to invasive SCC.
- Penile Malignant Tumors:
- Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCC): Most common (>95%). Risk factors: HPV (16, 18), phimosis, poor hygiene, smoking.
- Verrucous Carcinoma (Buschke-Löwenstein tumor): Exophytic, locally invasive, low metastatic potential.
- Scrotal Conditions:
- Hydrocele: Serous fluid in tunica vaginalis.
- Varicocele: Dilated pampiniform plexus veins (📌 "bag of worms" feel).
- Scrotal SCC: Associated with poor hygiene, chronic irritation (e.g., soot exposure in chimney sweeps).
⭐ Erythroplasia of Queyrat is a specific form of squamous cell carcinoma in situ occurring on the glans penis or prepuce, strongly associated with HPV infection.
Testicular Tumors - Germ Cell Jamboree
- 95% are Germ Cell Tumors (GCTs); peak incidence 15-35 years. Presents as painless testicular mass.
- Risk factors: Cryptorchidism, family history, Klinefelter syndrome, prior GCT.
Seminoma vs. NSGCT Overview
| Feature | Seminoma | NSGCTs |
|---|---|---|
| Age (Peak) | 30s-40s | 20s-30s |
| Gross | Homogenous, grey-white | Heterogenous, hemorrhage, necrosis |
| Spread | Lymphatic (paraaortic) | Early hematogenous (esp. Chorio) |
| Radiosensitive | High | Low (chemosensitive) |
| AFP | Negative | Often ↑ (YST, Embryonal Ca) |
| hCG | ~10-15% ↑ | Often ↑ (Chorio, Embryonal Ca) |
| Key Histo | "Fried egg" cells, lymphocytes | Varies: Schiller-Duval (YST), etc. |
- AFP: ↑ Yolk Sac Tumor (YST), Embryonal Ca.
- hCG: ↑ Choriocarcinoma, Embryonal Ca, ~**10-15%** Seminomas.
- LDH: Non-specific; tumor burden.
- PLAP: Seminoma, Embryonal Ca.
- OCT3/4: Seminoma, Embryonal Ca.

⭐ Seminomas are classically AFP negative; presence of AFP strongly suggests a non-seminomatous component or a mixed GCT.
Prostate Pathology - Gland Gone Wild
-
Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH)
- Common in older men; non-premalignant.
- Zone: Transitional (periurethral) → LUTS (hesitancy, urgency).
- Patho: ↑DHT → stromal & epithelial hyperplasia.
- Histo: Nodular glandular & stromal proliferation.
- Complications: Obstruction, UTI, bladder hypertrophy.
- Rx: α1-blockers, 5α-reductase inhibitors, TURP.

-
Prostatitis
- Inflammation: Acute/Chronic bacterial (E. coli), CPPS (most common).
- Symptoms: Dysuria, pelvic pain; fever (acute).
-
Prostate Adenocarcinoma
- Most common male cancer (excluding skin).
- Zone: Peripheral (posterior) → DRE palpable.
- Risk: Age, African-American, family Hx.
- Screening: PSA (↑ > 4 ng/mL suspicious), DRE.
- Histo: Infiltrative glands, prominent nucleoli, perineural invasion. Gleason score (prognostic).
- Spread: Bone (osteoblastic 📌), obturator nodes.
⭐ Most prostate cancers are adenocarcinomas arising in the peripheral zone.
-
Flowchart: Prostate Cancer Workup
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Cryptorchidism ↑ risk of seminoma & infertility.
- Testicular torsion: Acute hemorrhagic infarction from cord twisting; Bell-clapper deformity predisposes.
- BPH: Transitional zone origin, causes urinary obstruction; not premalignant.
- Prostate adenocarcinoma: Typically peripheral zone; Gleason score for prognosis.
- Seminoma: Most common germ cell tumor; radiosensitive, fried egg cells, ↑PLAP.
- Yolk Sac Tumor: Common in children <3 yrs; Schiller-Duval bodies, ↑AFP.
- Choriocarcinoma: Aggressive; early hematogenous spread, markedly ↑hCG.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app