A 35-year-old man with a stage I non-seminomatous germ-cell tumor of the right testis was treated with a simple orchidectomy. Sixty-seven months later, the patient who was on clinical follow-up, has presented five bilateral lung nodules on computed-tomography scan. Additional staging showed no other abnormalities. Lung biopsy of two nodules was performed during a videothoracoscopy and the histologic examination revealed a sarcoidosis-like necrotizing granulomatosis. The coexistence of non-caseating granulomas and testis carcinoma showed an increase during the last two decades. The immunopathogenesis of sarcoid formation in malignant tumours is still unknown. During follow-up of patients with testicular carcinomas, the presence of lung nodules requires a histologic examination and sarcoidosis should be considered as differential diagnosis.