Retinoblastoma seeds: impact on American Joint Committee on Cancer clinical staging
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BMJ
Abstract
Aim :To investigate whether the American Joint
Committee on Cancer (AJCC) clinical category cT2b
needs to be subclassified by the type and distribution of
retinoblastoma (RB) seeding.
Methods Multicentre, international registry-based
data were collected from RB centres enrolled between
January 2001 and December 2013. 1054 RB eyes
with vitreous or subretinal seeds from 18 ophthalmic
oncology centres, in 13 countries within six continents
were analysed. Local treatment failure was defined
as the use of secondary enucleation or external beam
radiation therapy (EBRT) and was estimated with the
Kaplan-Meier method.
Results Clinical category cT2b included 1054 eyes.
Median age at presentation was 16.0 months. Of these,
428 (40.6%) eyes were salvaged, and 430 (40.8%) were
treated with primary and 196 (18.6%) with secondary
enucleation. Of the 592 eyes that had complete data
for globe salvage analysis, the distribution of seeds
was focal in 143 (24.2%) and diffuse in 449 (75.8%).
The 5-year Kaplan-Meier cumulative globe-salvage
(without EBRT) was 78% and 49% for eyes with focal
and diffuse RB seeding, respectively. Cox proportional
hazards regression analysis confirmed a higher local
treatment failure risk with diffuse seeds as compared
with focal seeds (hazard rate: 2.8; p<0.001). There was
insufficient evidence to prove or disprove an association
between vitreous seed type and local treatment failure
risk(p=0.06).
Conclusion :This international, multicentre, registry based analysis of RB eyes affirmed that eyes with
diffuse intraocular distribution of RB seeds at diagnosis
had a higher risk of local treatment failure when
compared with focal seeds. Subclassification of AJCC RB
category cT2b into focal vs diffuse seeds will improve
prognostication for eye salvage.
Description
Research Article
