Diffuse infiltrating retinoblastoma: a multicentre, international, data-sharing study.
Ankit Singh Tomar, Paul T Finger, Brenda Gallie, Tero T Kivelä, Ashwin Mallipatna, Chengyue Zhang, Junyang Zhao, Matthew W Wilson, Rachel C Brennan, Michala Burges, Jesse L Berry, Rima Jubran, Vikas Khetan, Suganeswari Ganesan, Andrey Yarovoy, Vera Yarovaya, Elena Kotova, Denis Volodin, Yacoub A Yousef, Kalle Nummi, Tatiana L Ushakova, Olga V Yugay, Vladimir G Polyakov, Marco A Ramirez-Ortiz, Elizabeth Esparza-Aguiar, Guillermo Chantada, Paula Schaiquevich, Adriana Fandiño, Jason C Yam, Winnie W Lau, Carol P Lam, Phillipa Sharwood, Sonia Moorthy, Quah Boon Long, Vera Adobea Essuman, Lorna A Renner, Ekaterina Semenova, Jaume Catala-Mora, Genoveva Correa-Llano, Elisa Carreras
Summary
Approximately 1 in 20 patients with retinoblastoma had DIR, which often presented with glaucoma, anterior segment involvement or intraocular bleeding. DIR was more lethal than non-DIR cT3, with enucleation revealing high-risk pathology.
Abstract
BACKGROUND
To determine the unique clinical characteristics and treatment outcomes of diffuse infiltrating retinoblastoma (DIR).
METHODS
This international, multicentre, registry-based retrospective case series analysed pooled data from January 2001 to December 2013, including 132 eyes from 132 patients with DIR.
RESULTS
Among 2854 eyes with retinoblastoma, 132 (4.6%; 95% CI, 3.9 to 5.5) had DIR. The median age at diagnosis for DIR patients was 24 months (IQR, 15-33), with no bilateral cases of DIR. The American Joint Committee on Cancer staging showed 4.5% cT2 and 95.5% cT3 categories, with no cT1 or cT4 cases. Clinical features associated with DIR included secondary glaucoma (67%), retinal detachment (38%), diffuse vitreous seeds (37%), anterior segment involvement (24%), vitreous haemorrhage (50%) and hyphema (6%). Primary enucleation was the predominant treatment (81%), while 19% initially received systemic chemotherapy, with 6% requiring subsequent enucleation. The 5-year Kaplan-Meier survival rate for cT3 DIR was 82% (95% CI, 78 to 86), significantly lower than the 94% (95% CI, 93 to 95) for cT3 non-DIR cases (p<0.001). Cox proportional hazards regression returned a higher risk of metastatic death for DIR cT3 compared with non-DIR cT3 (HR, 3.3; 95% CI, 1.8 to 5.9; p<0.001). High-risk pathological features were more frequent in DIR (41% vs 28%, p=0.004). There was no association between DIR and local treatment failure.
CONCLUSIONS
Approximately 1 in 20 patients with retinoblastoma had DIR, which often presented with glaucoma, anterior segment involvement or intraocular bleeding. DIR was more lethal than non-DIR cT3, with enucleation revealing high-risk pathology.
Keywords
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Discussion
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