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Testicular cancer


+ Emergency

If any of the following are present or suspected, please refer the patient to the emergency department (via ambulance if necessary) or seek emergent medical advice if in a remote region.

Emergency treatment required - needs discussion with on call specialist and/or emergency department.

  • Symptoms of airway obstruction, SVC obstruction
  • Severe gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding
  • Bowel obstruction
  • Febrile neutropenia
  • Symptomatic hypercalcaemia
  • Other organ failure/dysfunction
  • Uncontrolled and disabling pain
  • Massive haemoptysis and/or stridor
  • Neurological signs suggestive of brain metastases or cord compression
  • Very high calcium (3.0mmol/L)
  • Severe dysphagia with dehydration
  • Biopsy proven small cell lung cancer
    • patients with symptoms of shortness of breath, deteriorating organ function
  • Metastatic germ cell tumour (GCT) confirmed (biopsy) or suspected (tumour markers)
  • Patients with severe symptoms, organ failure or life threatening complications
  • Highly aggressive lymphoma
    • Burkitt’s lymphoma
    • lymphoblastic lymphoma
  • Acute leukaemia

+ Useful management information

  • Patients with testicular mass should be referred to Urologists
  • Discuss sperm banking with the patient prior to treatment. Sperm count (with or without banking as appropriate) if fertility is a concern
  • In very rare cases where there is a possibility of a benign tumour, excisional biopsy with a frozen section should be performed prior to definitive orchiectomy to allow for possibility of organ-sparing partial orchiectomy
  • If there are signs suggestive of metastases consider:
    • brain and spinal CT
    • bone scan
    • liver USS
    • brain or bone MRI 

+ Minimum referral criteria- Does your patient meet the minimum referral criteria?

+ Standard referral information to be included in all referrals

Essential referral information

Without this information the referral will be rejected

  • General referral information
  • Past medical history, current medications
  • Previous cancer treatment details
  • Histopathology
  • FBC, ELFT, Alpha-fetoprotein, ß-human chorionic gonadotropin, Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) results
  • Any relevant XR results and/or relevant CT results

+ Additional referral information for referrals

  • No additional information


Last updated: Monday, August 13, 2018

Send referrals to


Secure messaging:
Secure web transfer IQ43050005G

General Fax:
3810 1438

Priority Fax for urgent category 1 referrals:
3413 7277

Post:
Outpatients Referrals Centre
PO Box 73, Ipswich
Queensland, 4305

Patient Enquiries:
3810 1217

GP/Specialist Referral Enquiry:
3810 1869 or 3810 1858


Named referrals

If you would like to send a named referral, please address it to the specialist on the referral template, who will allocate a suitably qualified specialist to see the patient.

From July 1 2017 Commonwealth growth funding has been capped. This changes how WMHS can fund its growth as an organisation. Named referrals from GP’s help support hospital funding through a Medicare bulk-billing arrangement. The new federal funding model incorporates specific pricing for patients which removes concerns around ‘double dipping'. This benefits hospital and patient services.


Patient must bring

  • Medicare card
  • Any concession cards (e.g. Pension, Health Care, DVA, PBS Safety Net, ADF, etc)