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Archives de Pediatrie : Organe Officiel... Jan 2016Retinoblastoma is the most common intraocular malignancy of infancy with an incidence of 1/15,000 births. Sixty percent of retinoblastomas are unilateral, with a median... (Review)
Review
Retinoblastoma is the most common intraocular malignancy of infancy with an incidence of 1/15,000 births. Sixty percent of retinoblastomas are unilateral, with a median age at diagnosis of 2 years, and in most cases they are not hereditary. Retinoblastoma is bilateral in 40% of cases, with an earlier median age at diagnosis of 1 year. All bilateral and multifocal unilateral forms are hereditary and are part of a genetic cancer predisposition syndrome. All children with a bilateral or familial form, and 10-15% of children with a unilateral form, constitutionally carry an RB1 gene mutation. The two most frequent symptoms at diagnosis are leukocoria and strabismus. Diagnosis is made by fundoscopy, with ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contributing both to diagnosis and assessment of the extension of the disease. Treatment of patients with retinoblastoma must take into account the various aspects of the disease (unilateral/bilateral, size, location), the risks for vision, and the possible hereditary nature of the disease. The main prognostic aspects are still early detection and adapted coverage by a multidisciplinary, highly specialized team. Enucleation is still often necessary in unilateral disease; the decision for adjuvant treatment is made according to the histological risk factors. The most important recent therapeutic advances concern conservative treatment, which is proposed for at least one of the two eyes in most bilateral cases: laser alone or in combination with chemotherapy, cryotherapy, or brachytherapy. Recently, the development of new conservative techniques of treatment, such as intra-arterial selective chemotherapy perfusion and intravitreal injections, aims at preserving visual function in these children and decreasing the number of enucleations and the need for external beam radiotherapy. The vital prognosis related to retinoblastoma is now excellent in industrialized countries, but long-term survival is still related to the development of secondary tumors, mainly secondary sarcoma. Retinoblastoma requires multidisciplinary care as well as a long-term specialized follow-up. Early counseling of patients and their family concerning the risk of transmission of the disease and the risk of development of secondary tumors is necessary.
Topics: Child; Humans; Incidence; Prognosis; Reflex, Pupillary; Retinal Neoplasms; Retinoblastoma; Retinoblastoma Protein; Strabismus
PubMed: 26679524
DOI: 10.1016/j.arcped.2015.09.025 -
Asia-Pacific Journal of Ophthalmology... 2017Retinoblastoma is a rare cancer in children, where in less than a century of dire mortality there has been a cure in industrialized countries. Unfortunately, mortality... (Review)
Review
Retinoblastoma is a rare cancer in children, where in less than a century of dire mortality there has been a cure in industrialized countries. Unfortunately, mortality remains high in emerging countries. The evolution of treatment makes it possible to go further by preserving the eyeball but this must not be done at the cost of the reappearance of metastases. Herein we outline the evolution of treatment from the beginning of the 20th century until the last recent evolutions, trying to imagine what could be the future treatments. In this pathology, the ophthalmologist is a doctor who must cure his patient and enucleation is considered a failure. This situation should not lead to shizophrenic situations where to keep an eye one would take risks with the life of the child. New international classifications, international prospective multicentric studies, and the search for blood biomarkers that can predict the risk of micrometastases could allow for better stratification of patients.
Topics: Combined Modality Therapy; Diagnostic Techniques, Ophthalmological; Humans; Retinal Neoplasms; Retinoblastoma
PubMed: 28558178
DOI: 10.22608/APO.201778 -
Bulletin Du Cancer Apr 2014Retinoblastoma is the most common intraocular malignancy of infancy with an incidence of 1/15,000 to 1/20,000 births. Sixty percent of retinoblastomas are unilateral,... (Review)
Review
Retinoblastoma is the most common intraocular malignancy of infancy with an incidence of 1/15,000 to 1/20,000 births. Sixty percent of retinoblastomas are unilateral, with a median age at diagnosis of two years, and in most cases are not hereditary. Retinoblastoma is bilateral in 40% of cases, with an earlier median age at diagnosis of one year. All bilateral and multifocal unilateral forms are hereditary and are part of a genetic cancer predisposition syndrome. All children with a bilateral or familial form, and 10 to 15% of children with an unilateral form, constitutionally carry an RB1 gene mutation. The two most frequent symptoms revealing retinoblastoma are leukocoria and strabismus. Diagnosis is made by fundoscopy, with ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contributing both to diagnosis and assessment of the extension of the disease. Treatment of patients with retinoblastoma must take into account the various aspects of the disease (unilateral/bilateral, size, localization…), the risk to vision and the possible hereditary nature of the disease. The main prognostic aspects are still premature detection and adapted coverage by a multi-disciplinary specialized team. Enucleation is still often necessary in unilateral disease; the decision for adjuvant treatment is taken according to the histological risk factors. The most important recent therapeutic advances concern the conservative treatment which is proposed for at least one of the two eyes in most bilateral cases: laser alone or in combination with chemotherapy, cryotherapy or brachytherapy. Recently, the development of new conservative techniques of treatment, such as intra-arterial selective chemotherapy perfusion, aims at preserving visual function in these children and decreasing the number of enucleations and the need for external beam radiotherapy. The vital prognosis related to retinoblatoma is now excellent in industrialized countries, but long-term survival is still related to the development of secondary tumors, mainly secondary sarcoma. Retinoblastoma requires multi-disciplinary care as well as a long term specialized follow-up. Early counseling of patients and their family concerning the risk of transmission of the disease and the risk of development of secondary tumors is necessary.
Topics: Child, Preschool; Eye Enucleation; Genes, Retinoblastoma; Humans; Infant; Neoplasms, Multiple Primary; Neoplasms, Second Primary; Organ Sparing Treatments; Prognosis; Rare Diseases; Retinoblastoma
PubMed: 24793631
DOI: 10.1684/bdc.2014.1931 -
Clinical & Experimental Ophthalmology Apr 2024In the current era of global health awareness for retinoblastoma (RB), the challenge that lies ahead of us is providing optimal care for children affected with RB in... (Review)
Review
In the current era of global health awareness for retinoblastoma (RB), the challenge that lies ahead of us is providing optimal care for children affected with RB in underdeveloped nations. The understanding of similarities and disparities between various nations across the world aids in achieving comparable outcomes. With dissolving geographic barriers and evolving collaboration, global collaborative studies on RB are becoming increasingly common. They provide real-world, robust evidence on several aspects of RB. This review discusses insights gained from global RB studies regarding the demographics, certain aspects of etiopathogenesis and epidemiology, international travel burden, disparities in clinical presentations based on national income levels, management protocols, pathology, treatment outcomes, and the effect of COVID-19 on RB care across the world. These insights are likely to impact individual practice as well as inform policy reforms.
Topics: Child; Humans; Retinoblastoma; Retinal Neoplasms; Treatment Outcome
PubMed: 38263682
DOI: 10.1111/ceo.14357 -
Der Pathologe Nov 2017Retinoblastomas are extremely rare withabout half of the cases being hereditary eye neoplasms in young children. They show highly proliferative, CRX-positive... (Review)
Review
Retinoblastomas are extremely rare withabout half of the cases being hereditary eye neoplasms in young children. They show highly proliferative, CRX-positive undifferentiated tumour cells (occasionally forming rosettes). Staging is performed according to the pTNM classification and the International Retinoblastoma Staging System (IRSS). The diagnostic basis for systemic administration of chemotherapy and/or radiation is postlaminar optic nerve invasion, massive choroidal tumour infiltration, scleral invasion or even extraocular invasion. In cases that are difficult to diagnose, immunohistochemical stains (CRX and Ki67) may be very helpful. Retinocytomas (retinomas) completely lack undifferentiated tumour cell areas, show an exclusive photoreceptor differentiation and an exceptionally low Ki67 index.
Topics: Humans; Retinal Neoplasms; Retinoblastoma
PubMed: 29043448
DOI: 10.1007/s00292-017-0384-8 -
Indian Journal of Pediatrics 1993Retinoblastoma is the most common primary ocular malignancy in childhood, usually occurring below the age of five. Recent advances in molecular biology have enabled... (Review)
Review
Retinoblastoma is the most common primary ocular malignancy in childhood, usually occurring below the age of five. Recent advances in molecular biology have enabled understanding of retinoblastoma tumorigenesis as well as detecting carriers of the mutant retinoblastoma allele. It is possible now to predict prenatally whether a child carries the retinoblastoma genome. This has enabled early detection of retinoblastoma and improved outcome. Also these children are at risk for mesenchymal tumors in early adult life necessitating life long vigilance. Great strides have been made in the management of retinoblastoma. Introduction of a new pathological staging system and addition of combination chemotherapy for extraocular disease has led to more than 80% long term disease free survivors in this group of patients, who earlier had a very poor outcome. For localized intraocular disease, local treatment seems to be all that is necessary. Newer radiation techniques have helped preserve useful vision and reduced radiation related side effects.
Topics: Eye Neoplasms; Humans; Retinoblastoma
PubMed: 8244497
DOI: 10.1007/BF02822180 -
Der Ophthalmologe : Zeitschrift Der... Jan 2006Retinoblastomas are the most frequent intraocular tumors in childhood. Untreated, the tumor is almost always fatal. Using a multidisciplinary approach combining the... (Review)
Review
Retinoblastomas are the most frequent intraocular tumors in childhood. Untreated, the tumor is almost always fatal. Using a multidisciplinary approach combining the efforts of ophthalmologists, radiation oncologists, pediatric oncologists and geneticists a survival rate of more than 95% can be achieved. Molecular genetic research on the origin of retinoblastomas has substantially helped in our understanding of the origin of malignant tumors in general, as well as to the key role of the Rb-1 gene as a tumor suppressor.
Topics: Diagnosis, Differential; Eye Neoplasms; Humans; Practice Guidelines as Topic; Practice Patterns, Physicians'; Retinoblastoma
PubMed: 16382314
DOI: 10.1007/s00347-005-1296-1 -
The Lancet. Oncology Sep 2014About 5% of children with retinoblastoma from germline mutation of the RB1 gene are at risk of developing trilateral retinoblastoma--intraocular retinoblastoma combined... (Meta-Analysis)
Meta-Analysis Review
BACKGROUND
About 5% of children with retinoblastoma from germline mutation of the RB1 gene are at risk of developing trilateral retinoblastoma--intraocular retinoblastoma combined with a histologically similar brain tumour, most commonly in the pineal gland. We aimed to provide a systematic overview of published data for trilateral retinoblastoma, and to analyse how survival has changed.
METHODS
We searched Medline and Embase for scientific literature published between Jan 1, 1966, and April 14, 2014, that assessed trilateral retinoblastoma cases. We undertook a meta-analysis of survival with the Kaplan-Meier method and Cox proportional hazards regression, stratified on the basis of the original study, to account for between-study heterogeneity.
FINDINGS
We included 90 studies, with 174 patients with trilateral retinoblastoma. 5-year survival after pineal trilateral retinoblastoma increased from 6% (95% CI 2-15) in patients diagnosed before 1995, to 44% (26-61; p<0·0001) in those diagnosed from 1995 onwards. Before 1995, no patients with non-pineal trilateral retinoblastoma survived, but from 1995 onwards, 5-year survival was 57% (30-77; p=0·035). Hazard ratios (HR) adjusted for the presence of leptomeningeal metastases and trilateral retinoblastoma location, suggested that both conventional (HR 0·059, 95% CI 0·016-0·226; p<0·0001) and high-dose chemotherapy with stem-cell rescue (0·013, 0·002-0·064; p<0·0001) most strongly contributed to this improvement. Absence of leptomeningeal metastases (HR 2·13, 95% CI 0·98-4·60; p=0·055) were associated with improved survival. Non-pineal trilateral retinoblastomas were larger than pineal tumours (median 30 mm [range 6-100] vs 22 mm [7-60]; p=0·012), but both had similar outcomes since 1995.
INTERPRETATION
Our results suggest that improvements in overall survival are attributable to improved chemotherapy regimens and early detection of pineal trilateral retinoblastoma. As such, successful treatment of trilateral retinoblastoma should include screening at least at the time of retinoblastoma diagnosis and chemotherapy, which would preferably be a high-dose regimen with autologous stem-cell rescue.
FUNDING
None.
Topics: Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols; Child; Child, Preschool; Combined Modality Therapy; Disease-Free Survival; Early Detection of Cancer; Female; Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation; Humans; Infant; Kaplan-Meier Estimate; Male; Pineal Gland; Prognosis; Proportional Hazards Models; Radiotherapy, Adjuvant; Retinal Neoplasms; Retinoblastoma; Risk Assessment; Survival Analysis; Treatment Outcome
PubMed: 25126964
DOI: 10.1016/S1470-2045(14)70336-5 -
Asia-Pacific Journal of Ophthalmology... 2017Retinoblastoma is the prototype genetic cancer: in one or both eyes of young children, most retinoblastomas are initiated by biallelic mutation of the retinoblastoma... (Review)
Review
Retinoblastoma is the prototype genetic cancer: in one or both eyes of young children, most retinoblastomas are initiated by biallelic mutation of the retinoblastoma tumor suppressor gene, RB1, in a developing retinal cell. All those with bilateral retinoblastoma have heritable cancer, although 95% have not inherited the RB1 mutation. Non-heritable retinoblastoma is always unilateral, with 98% caused by loss of both RB1 alleles from the tumor, whereas 2% have normal RB1 in tumors initiated by amplification of the MYCN oncogene. Good understanding of retinoblastoma genetics supports optimal care for retinoblastoma children and their families. Retinoblastoma is the first cancer to officially acknowledge the seminal role of genetics in cancer, by incorporating "H" into the eighth edition of cancer staging (2017): those who carry the RB1 cancer-predisposing gene are H1; those proven to not carry the familial RB1 mutation are H0; and those at unknown risk are HX. We suggest H0* be used for those with residual <1% risk to carry a RB1 mutation due to undetectable mosaicism. Loss of RB1 from a susceptible developing retinal cell initiates the benign precursor, retinoma. Progressive genomic changes result in retinoblastoma, and cancer progression ensues with increasing genomic disarray. Looking forward, novel therapies are anticipated from studies of retinoblastoma and metastatic tumor cells and the second primary cancers that the carriers of RB1 mutations are at high risk to develop. Here, we summarize the concepts of retinoblastoma genetics for ophthalmologists in a question/answer format to assist in the care of patients and their families.
Topics: Biomarkers, Tumor; DNA Mutational Analysis; DNA, Neoplasm; Genes, Retinoblastoma; Humans; Molecular Diagnostic Techniques; Mutation; Retinal Neoplasms; Retinoblastoma
PubMed: 28399338
DOI: 10.22608/APO.201711 -
Journal of Pediatric Ophthalmology and... 2003
Topics: Humans; Retinal Neoplasms; Retinoblastoma
PubMed: 12580264
DOI: 10.3928/0191-3913-20030101-04