What Is Penile Cancer?
Penile cancer occurs when cells in the penis grow out of control.
Almost all penile cancers start in skin cells of the penis:
- Squamous cell carcinoma
- Accounts for about 95% of penile cancers
- Can occur anywhere on the penis
- Develops from flat skin cells called squamous cells
- Melanoma
- Tends to grow and spread quickly
- Most often occur in sun-exposed skin and rarely on the penis
- Develops from melanocytes, which are cells that produce the brownish color in the skin that helps protect it from the sun.
- Basal cell carcinoma (also known as basal cell cancer)
- Slow-growing and rarely spreads to other parts of the body
- Only makes up a small portion of penile cancers
- Adenocarcinoma (Paget disease of the penis)
- Sarcoma
- Accounts for a small number of penile cancers
- Develops from blood vessels, smooth muscle, or other connective tissue cells of the penis
What Are Symptoms of Penile Cancer?
Symptoms of penile cancer include:
What Causes Penile Cancer?
The exact cause of penile cancer is unknown, though it is sometimes associated with other conditions.
Risk factors for developing penile cancer include:
- Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection
- Not being circumcised
- Phimosis
- Smegma
- Smoking and other tobacco use
- UV light treatment of psoriasis
- Age
- About 80% of penile cancers are diagnosed in men over age 55
- The average age at diagnosis is 68
- Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)
How Is Penile Cancer Diagnosed?
Penile cancer is diagnosed with a physical exam, patient history, and tests such as:
- Biopsy
- Incisional biopsy
- Excisional biopsy
- Lymph node biopsy
- Fine needle aspiration (FNA)
- Surgical biopsy
- Imaging tests
- Computed tomography (CT) scan
- CT-guided needle biopsy
- Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan
- Ultrasound
- Chest X-ray to check if the cancer has spread to the lungs
- Computed tomography (CT) scan
What Is the Treatment for Penile Cancer?
Treatment for penile cancer may include one or more of the following:
- Surgery
- Circumcision
- Simple excision
- Removes tumor and some nearby skin
- Wide local excision
- Removes tumor along with a larger amount of normal tissue around it (wide margins) to make it less likely cancer cells are left behind
- A skin graft may be taken from another part of the body and used over the area if there is not enough skin remaining
- Mohs surgery (microscopically controlled surgery)
- May be used instead of wide local excision
- Removes one layer of skin at a time, samples are checked for cancer, and the process is repeated until there are no cancer cells in the skin sample
- Process can be slow but can leave more tissue intact
- Glansectomy
- Used for small tumors on the tip of the penis (glans)
- Skin grafts may be needed to rebuild the glans after surgery
- Partial or total penectomy
- Lymph node surgery
- If cancer has grown deep inside the penis, nearby lymph nodes in the groin may need to be removed
- Sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB)
- Inguinal lymphadenectomy (groin lymph node dissection)
- Pelvic lymph node surgery
- Radiation therapy
- External beam radiation therapy
- Brachytherapy (internal radiation)
- Interstitial radiation
- Plesiobrachytherapy
- Local treatments (other than surgery)
- Laser ablation uses a beam of laser light to destroy (ablate) cancer cells
- Cryosurgery (cryoablation or cryotherapy) works similarly to laser ablation but uses liquid nitrogen to freeze and kill the cancer cells
- Topical treatments
- Topical chemotherapy
- 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) cream
- Imiquimod cream
- Photodynamic therapy (PDT) uses special drugs and laser light to treat cancer near the surface of the penis
- Chemotherapy
- Cisplatin
- Fluorouracil (5-FU)
- Paclitaxel (Taxol)
- Ifosfamide (Ifex)
- Mitomycin C
- Capecitabine (Xeloda)
- These drugs may also be used in combination:
- Cisplatin plus 5-FU
- TIP: paclitaxel (Taxol), ifosfamide, and cisplatin (“platinum”)
What Is the Life Expectancy for Penile Cancer?
Penile cancer can be deadly, but it is a rare cancer, and when diagnosed and treated in early stages the prognosis is generally good.
Life expectancy for penile cancer is often expressed in 5-year survival rates, that is, how many people will be alive 5 years after diagnosis.
Penile cancer 5-year survival rates:
- Localized (no sign the cancer has spread outside the penis): 82%
- Regional (cancer has spread outside the penis to nearby structures or lymph nodes): 50%
- Distant (cancer has spread to distant parts of the body such as the lungs): 12%
From
https://www.cancer.net/cancer-types/penile-cancer/statistics