A 16-year-old male with a history of cryptorchidism corrected in infancy should be monitored for the development of which cancer?

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Multiple Choice

A 16-year-old male with a history of cryptorchidism corrected in infancy should be monitored for the development of which cancer?

Explanation:
Undescended testis is a risk factor for testicular germ cell tumors, and the risk persists even after surgical correction (orchiopexy). In a 16-year-old who had cryptorchidism fixed in infancy, the cancer to monitor for is testicular cancer, particularly seminoma, which commonly affects young men. Regular testicular self-examination and clinician examinations are important, and any new lump or change should prompt imaging such as ultrasound and tumor-marker evaluation (like AFP, hCG, LDH) if a mass is suspected. The other cancers listed are not linked to a history of cryptorchidism. Regular monitoring focuses on the testicles due to the residual elevated risk.

Undescended testis is a risk factor for testicular germ cell tumors, and the risk persists even after surgical correction (orchiopexy). In a 16-year-old who had cryptorchidism fixed in infancy, the cancer to monitor for is testicular cancer, particularly seminoma, which commonly affects young men. Regular testicular self-examination and clinician examinations are important, and any new lump or change should prompt imaging such as ultrasound and tumor-marker evaluation (like AFP, hCG, LDH) if a mass is suspected. The other cancers listed are not linked to a history of cryptorchidism. Regular monitoring focuses on the testicles due to the residual elevated risk.

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