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Wilson Matthew W

🇴🇲 University of Kansas
ORCIDOpenAlex6 articles in GJC

6 articles in GJC

2.

Metastatic Death Based on Presenting Features and Treatment for Advanced Intraocular Retinoblastoma: A Multicenter Registry-Based Study.

Tomar Ankit Singh, Finger Paul T, Gallie Brenda, Kivelä Tero T, Mallipatna Ashwin, Zhang Chengyue et al.

OphthalmologyApr 20220 citationsCase Series

This study linked advanced retinoblastoma features (AJCC subcategories, tumor size) to metastatic death risk. Larger tumors and specific cT3 features increased mortality, with primary enucleation offering the best survival.

3.

High-risk Pathologic Features Based on Presenting Findings in Advanced Intraocular Retinoblastoma: A Multicenter, International Data-Sharing American Joint Committee on Cancer Study.

Tomar Ankit Singh, Finger Paul T, Gallie Brenda, Kivelä Tero T, Mallipatna Ashwin, Zhang Chengyue et al.

OphthalmologyApr 20220 citationsCase Series

This study found specific advanced retinoblastoma clinical features (glaucoma, hemorrhage, orbital cellulitis, large tumor size) predict high-risk pathology, guiding treatment decisions for better patient outcomes.

5.

A clinicopathological correlation of 67 eyes primarily enucleated for advanced intraocular retinoblastoma.

Wilson Matthew W, Qaddoumi Ibrahim, Billups Catherine, Haik Barrett G, Rodriguez-Galindo Carlos

Br J OphthalmolApr 201158 citationsRetrospective Studies

This study found that International Classification Group E in advanced retinoblastoma strongly predicts invasive disease, unlike other clinical measures. This highlights the need for careful histopathology in these enucleated eyes.

6.

Lack of correlation between the histologic and magnetic resonance imaging results of optic nerve involvement in eyes primarily enucleated for retinoblastoma.

Wilson Matthew W, Rodriguez-Galindo Carlos, Billups Catherine, Haik Barrett G, Laningham Fred, Patay Zoltan

OphthalmologyAug 200938 citationsRetrospective Studies

This study found poor correlation between MRI and histology for optic nerve invasion in retinoblastoma, meaning MRI is unreliable for precisely assessing invasion extent; histology remains critical for high-risk features.

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