[HTML][HTML] Histopathologic findings of eyes enucleated after treatment with chemosurgery for retinoblastoma

CP Graeber, YP Gobin, BP Marr, IJ Dunkel… - The Open …, 2011 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
CP Graeber, YP Gobin, BP Marr, IJ Dunkel, SE Brodie, N Bornfeld, DH Char, R Folberg…
The Open Ophthalmology Journal, 2011ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Results: Between May 1, 2006 and April 30, 2009, 56 eyes received chemosurgery at our
institution, and 10 of these were enucleated subsequently. All were Reese Ellsworth Group
5 at enucleation. Of the 21 eyes that were treated with chemosurgery as the primary
treatment, 1 (5%) was enucleated subsequently; its histopathology revealed residual non-
necrotic, non-calcified tumor. Of the 34 eyes treated with chemosurgery after other
treatments, 9 (24%) were enucleated, and 5 of these eyes contained non-calcified, non …
Results:
Between May 1, 2006 and April 30, 2009, 56 eyes received chemosurgery at our institution, and 10 of these were enucleated subsequently. All were Reese Ellsworth Group 5 at enucleation. Of the 21 eyes that were treated with chemosurgery as the primary treatment, 1 (5%) was enucleated subsequently; its histopathology revealed residual non-necrotic, non-calcified tumor. Of the 34 eyes treated with chemosurgery after other treatments, 9 (24%) were enucleated, and 5 of these eyes contained non-calcified, non-necrotic tumor. None was enucleated for complications of chemosurgery. All patients were alive and free of metastatic disease as of September 2009.
Conclusions:
A significant number of eyes with advanced intraocular retinoblastoma avoided enucleation as a result of chemosurgery. The rate of eyes that were enucleated was higher when chemosurgery was the secondary rather than the primary treatment. Of the eight eyes enucleated for progressive disease six had non-necrotic, non-calcified tumor cells.
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