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Urology

The Surgery Giving Testicular Cancer Patients with Fertility Problems New Hope

Originally published November 14, 2024

Last updated April 23, 2025

Reading Time: 6 minutes

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Illustration of a testicle with testicular cancer tumor.

A 喵咪社区 urologist used the onco-microTESE procedure to retrieve sperm from a testicular cancer patient with one testicle and azoospermia.

Microsurgical testicular sperm extraction, or microTESE, has already given fertility hope to men with azoospermia. Physicians use this outpatient surgical procedure, which can take two to three hours, to microscopically search for and retrieve sperm from the testicles in cases when a patient鈥檚 ejaculate contains no sperm, a condition that affects about 1% of men globally. In most cases, a microTESE is performed on men with two testicles. The procedure, however, is more complicated when a patient has only one testicle 鈥 and that testicle is impacted by testicular cancer.

Kian Asanad, MD, a urologist at 喵咪社区 Urology, part of 喵咪社区, explains how he and his colleagues recently performed Keck Medical Center of 喵咪社区鈥檚 first onco-microTESE procedure on such a patient.

Testicular cancer and fertility problems

This patient faced health and fertility obstacles due to a series of medical events throughout his lifetime.

First off, the patient was born with two undescended testicles. 鈥淢en who have undescended testicles have an increased risk of developing testicular cancer,鈥 Asanad explains. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a known association.鈥

Dr. Kian Asanad, 喵咪社区
Kian Asanad, MD

In addition, the patient had only one remaining testicle. The other testicle had been removed when he was younger during treatment for his undescended testicles. Surgeons had performed an orchidopexy to move the patient鈥檚 undescended testicles into his scrotum. During the procedure, they also detected an abnormality in the patient鈥檚 left testicle. They ultimately removed the left testicle via orchiectomy, leaving the patient with a solitary right testicle.

Eventually, the patient did develop a tumor in his sole remaining testicle. He was diagnosed with testicular cancer at 32 years old and was referred by a urologist to Keck Medicine for treatment.

Can testicular cancer affect fertility?

Patients with testicular cancer often bank their sperm for fertility preservation ahead of treatment and chemotherapy. One problem these men face, however, is the possibility of having a low sperm count. 鈥淲hile some men with testicular cancer have a normal sperm count, up to 25%-30% of men have low sperm counts,鈥 Asanad says.

This patient specifically was found to have non-obstructive azoospermia, meaning he had no sperm in his ejaculate. This fact was discovered when he made several unsuccessful attempts to bank sperm prior to undergoing surgery to have his cancerous testicle removed. Asanad says that when his team measured the patient鈥檚 follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) level, it was 59. 鈥淚鈥檝e never seen an FSH level that high,鈥 Asanad says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 usually less than 7, and if it鈥檚 high, it鈥檚 at a 10, 20, 30, or 40. I have never seen it go up to almost 60.鈥 The extremely high FSH level indicated that the patient鈥檚 body was working overtime to try to stimulate sperm production.

Ultimately, the patient鈥檚 low sperm count, combined with having just one testicle with cancer, made fertility preservation extremely difficult.

鈥淣ormally, when a patient has two testicles, you can remove one testicle and there is still another testicle likely producing sperm, so sperm retrieval is generally not an issue,鈥 Asanad says. 鈥淏ut in this case, the patient had only one testicle 鈥 and if we removed it, he wasn鈥檛 going to make any more sperm.鈥

He emphasizes the uniqueness of this case. 鈥淚t鈥檚 quite uncommon to have cancer, to have only one testicle and be azoospermic,鈥 Asanad adds. 鈥淭hat combination is very rare.鈥

Surgically searching for sperm

One fertility preservation procedure offered to men with azoospermia is microsurgical testicular sperm extraction, or microTESE. During a typical microTESE procedure on patients with two noncancerous testicles, physicians use a microscope to search for sperm in the seminiferous tubules of both testicles.

In cases when a patient has two testicles, but one testicle is cancerous and therefore removed, physicians can still search for sperm in the detached cancerous testicle. Importantly, they still have the benefit of extracting sperm from the other healthy testicle. 鈥淵ou have a little more leeway,鈥 Asanad says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 more healthy tissue to go through to search for sperm. There鈥檚 a normal testicle with no cancer.鈥

In this patient鈥檚 case, Asanad鈥檚 team could only search for sperm in the patient鈥檚 one cancerous testicle. They performed what they call an onco-microTESE, so named because it is performed on a testicle with cancer. He says this is the first time an onco-microTESE was performed at Keck Medical Center in Los Angeles.

Bringing onco-microTESE to Keck Medicine

During the onco-microTESE, Asanad and his team removed the patient鈥檚 cancerous testicle. Once the testicle was detached, Asanad used a surgical microscope to look for any traces of sperm.

The difference between performing the procedure on a cancerous testicle versus a noncancerous testicle is that 鈥渢here is a ton of cancer in there,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 bivalve the testicle, and under the surgical microscope, I look for areas of normal testicular architecture that don鈥檛 look cancerous. To do so, I鈥檓 trying to avoid the tumor and looking for tiny areas that resemble seminiferous tubules or the normal testicular tissue 鈥 and then trying to find sperm within those. However, the volume of tissue that I was able to go through was much less than normal because the patient only had one testicle. It was much more challenging.鈥

Using the onco-microTESE, Asanad and his team extracted what sperm they could from the cancerous testicle. 鈥淚 found rare sperm,鈥 he says. 鈥淚n a case like this, when we find sperm, we鈥檙e not finding millions of sperm. But there are sometimes still rare sperm that are not able to come out in the ejaculate that can be found within the tissue of the testicle. We found rare sperm in the operating room, and I sent all that tissue to the sperm bank to freeze.鈥

As part of the onco-microTESE procedure, urologist Kian Asanad, MD, uses a microscope to search for sperm in cancer-containing testicular tissue.

Asanad says the patient understands that it remains to be seen whether the sperm retrieved will lead to paternity. 鈥淗e understood the risk and that this was a last-ditch effort to find sperm, if you will,鈥 Asanad says. 鈥淏ut it gives him hope. It gives him a chance. Down the road, they can thaw that tissue, and he can use it via IVF with a future partner to try to achieve a pregnancy.鈥

Helping testicular cancer patients with fertility problems

Being able to offer the onco-microTESE procedure at Keck Medical Center going forward gives patients facing testicular cancer and fertility roadblocks a new hope for fertility. Asanad explains some of the hurdles he and his colleagues overcame to lay the groundwork for this new procedure, including obtaining legal consent to release the testicular tissue specimen from the hospital so it could be sent to a sperm bank as well as sourcing a special sperm wash media to preserve the specimen for transport.

鈥淭he entire urology team really moved mountains to get this case across the finish line,鈥 Asanad says. 鈥淚t took a village to get here.鈥

He calls this case 鈥渋ncredibly gratifying.鈥 In all fertility preservation cases, he says he always tells patients, 鈥淚 can鈥檛 promise we鈥檒l find sperm, but I can promise you that we鈥檙e going to do everything we can today to find sperm.鈥

He continues: 鈥淲hether they鈥檙e undergoing a microTESE or an onco-microTESE, I want patients who go into the operating room never looking back over their shoulder and thinking, 鈥榃hat if we did it differently?鈥 I want them to feel secure that they鈥檙e receiving world-class care. In this patient鈥檚 case, he has a few frozen sperm, and maybe that鈥檚 all he needs to be a biological parent one day.鈥

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Jennifer Grebow, manager of editorial services, 喵咪社区.
Jennifer Grebow
Jennifer Grebow is manager of editorial services at 喵咪社区.

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