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Retinoblastoma - Review

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The most ominous of the causes of ocular

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calcification is from retinoblastoma.

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The calcification of retinoblastoma

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may be chunky or can be fluffy.

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The important thing about evaluation of patients and the

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calcification associated with retinoblastoma

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is to make sure that you don't get too

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focused on the large tumor, such that you neglect the

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second retinoblastoma

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because of the implications of therapy.

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This globe,

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because over half of it is involved with retinoblastoma,

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likely will require enucleation.

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This globe also needs treatment, so that way it doesn't

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grow in the same fashion as the left globe.

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But this one may be able to be treated with local

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therapy, as opposed to enucleation.

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Retinoblastoma is one of the cancers that

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can occur in the first year of life.

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As I mentioned previously,

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the entity may occur in one-third of cases

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in a bilateral fashion. When it does,

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we usually ascribe it to the familial form,

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which is associated with the RB1 tumor suppressor gene

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on the 13th chromosome.

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90% of retinoblastomas calcify. And as I said,

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there is a number of possible etiologies that may

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lead to absence, red reflex, or leukocoria,

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but most of these do not show calcification.

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Therapy for retinoblastoma may include when a tumor

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is unilateral and small in size, cryoablation,

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laser photocoagulation, chemotherapy,

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brachytherapy or plaque radiotherapy.

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However, when the tumor is large and unilateral

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and involves greater than half of the globe,

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enucleation is typically performed.

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In those cases of bilateral retinoblastoma,

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as you saw in that last example,

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enucleation occurs in the worst eye and then the smaller

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tumor in the second eye is usually treated

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with one of these entities.

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What one doesn't want to have is to leave

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a child who has bilateral blindness.

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Here is an example of MRI in a 13-month-old child,

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and we are looking at the FLAIR scan

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and the post-gadolinium T1-weighted scan,

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and then we have a separate child over here.

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This patient has retinoblastoma,

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which is bilobed in the left globe,

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but also has an additional finding

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in the contralateral globe.

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So here is the temporal retinoblastoma of the second

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eye, and the larger retinoblastoma of the left eye.

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These are seen on post-gadolinium coronal

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scans as showing contrast enhancement.

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The child

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seen in the lower image, on the right, was the example of

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the case that was shown as a case study,

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in which one has a very large retinoblastoma of the globe,

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as well as spread along the optic nerve intracranially

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and even affected, ultimately,

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the optic chiasm on the images above.

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As I mentioned,

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leukocoria is the clinical symptom that typically

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presents in the infant with retinoblastoma and

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has a large differential diagnosis.

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However, none of these entities will usually cause calcification.

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The only other entity that can cause calcification

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and is a tumor affecting the globe is the medulloepithelioma.

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However, this tumor typically involves the

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anterior segment and the uvea,

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as you recall, consists of the ciliary apparatus,

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the iris, and the choroid.

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Retinoblastoma is the most common cause

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of leukocoria in childhood.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Pediatrics

Orbit

Neuroradiology

Neuro

Neoplastic

MRI

Head and Neck

CT

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