Plaque
radiotherapy for choroidal and ciliochoroidal melanomas with limited nodular
extrascleral extension
J.J. Augsburger, S. Schneider, A. Narayana,
J.C. Breneman, B.S. Aron, W.L. Barrett, N. Trichopoulos ABSTRACT
Background:
Currently available clinical information
regarding management of posterior uveal melanomas complicated by nodular
extrascleral extension is inadequate to determine the role, if any,
for plaque radiotherapy in such patients.
Methods:
The authors performed a retrospective
descriptive study of eight patients with a choroidal or ciliochoroidal
melanoma complicated by nodular extrascleral extension who were treated
by surgical excision of the extrascleral nodule followed immediately
by plaque radiotherapy of the intraocular tumour. The calculated volume
of the extrascleral nodule was greater than 1 mm 3 but less than 1000
mm 3 in all cases, and the intraocular tumour was deemed treatable by
plaque radiotherapy in all patients.
Results:
Four of the eight patients died during
available follow-up, three from metastatic melanoma and one from a second
cancer. The median length of follow-up for the four surviving patients
was 10.1 years. The actuarial 5-year and 10-year all-cause death rates
were 37.5% and 53.1% respectively. One of the eight patients experienced
local intraocular tumour relapse following plaque therapy and underwent
secondary enucleation. None of the patients experienced orbital tumour
recurrence or underwent secondary orbital exenteration.
Interpretation:
Our results coupled with previously
published results from another centre suggest that plaque radiotherapy
may be an effective local treatment for selected patients with choroidal
or ciliochoroidal melanoma complicated by nodular extrascleral extension.
The fact that none of the patients in this series or in the previously
reported series experienced orbital recurrence following plaque radiotherapy
or required secondary orbital exenteration suggests that plaque therapy
may be better than enucleation alone in terms of these end points. These
results should not be extrapolated, of course, to patients with massive
extrascleral tumour extension or a choroidal or ciliochoroidal melanoma
too large for plaque radiotherapy.
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