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Treatment of Eye Cancer in Children With Chemosurgery Pierre Gobin (1), David Abramson (2), Ira Dunkel (3) 1: Interventional Neuroradiology, Weill Cornell.

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Presentation on theme: "Treatment of Eye Cancer in Children With Chemosurgery Pierre Gobin (1), David Abramson (2), Ira Dunkel (3) 1: Interventional Neuroradiology, Weill Cornell."— Presentation transcript:

1 Treatment of Eye Cancer in Children With Chemosurgery Pierre Gobin (1), David Abramson (2), Ira Dunkel (3) 1: Interventional Neuroradiology, Weill Cornell Medical College 2: Ophthalmic Oncology, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center 3: Pediatric Oncology, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center Disclosures: none

2 Retinoblastoma - Definition : -Cancer of the eye : precisely cancer of the retina, the light sensitive layer which enables the eye to see - Frequency: - 7th most common pediatric cancer - 80% diagnosed < 3 year-old - 75% unilateral, 25% bilateral - Prognosis: - 5 year-survival in the U.S: 98% - Genetic: - 40% patients have the genetic form

3 Clinical signs -Presenting signs: -leukocoria (white pupillary reflexion): 60% -Cross-eyes: 25% -Late diagnosis: leukocoria means the tumor is already filling the eye -Diagnostic: ophthalmoscopy, ultrasound

4 Treatment for Intraocular disease Wide array of treatment including: –Photocoagulation and Cryotherapy –Radiation –Chemotherapy Problem: –Most children present with advanced disease for which local control is impossible: the only treatment is enucleation (removing the eye).

5 Why a new treatment for Retinoblastoma? Avoid removing the eye (enucleation) Avoid toxicity of current treatments by radiation and chemotherapy

6 Treatment protocol General anesthesia, outpatient Puncture the artery in the groin Placement of a catheter in the artery of the eye Inject chemotherapy drugs in the artery of the eye. Three treatments at 3 weeks interval

7 Patient population 22 patients recruited since May 2006 –Age: 1 month to 10 years (median: 2 year) –Bilateral: 11/22 Previous treatments: –Contralateral Enucleation: 5 –Others: 11 All patients (except one) had advanced eye cancer normally treated by enucleation

8 Results Patient enrolled: 22 (23 eyes) Treatment completed in 20 patients –Treatment possible: 18/20 patients (90%) –Procedures failed in 2 Most patients had 3 treatments

9 Before After

10 Complications: No procedure related complications (64 procedures) Toxicity: –General: None of the usual complications of chemotherapy (readmission, infection, transfusion, hair loss) –Local: Two transient skin discoloration Four retinopathy –Dose too high in the beginning

11 Results Patients treated: 22 –Treatment impossible: 2 –Under treatment: 2 –Treatment completed: 18 patients Tumor control: –Tumor cured: 16/18 14 have kept their eye 2 enucleations: no tumor –Failures: 2 including one growth Vision result of 14 cured eyes –Eye with vision: 9 cases (improved in 4) –no vision: 5

12 Before After

13 Conclusion: Chemosurgery for retinoblastoma Accomplishment: In advanced eye cancer formerly treated by removing the eye, chemosurgery saved 78% of eyes and preserved vision in 50%. Future directions: –Using existing protocol, extend indications to less severe tumors –Develop new protocols to entirely replace intravenous chemotherapy and radiation therapy


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