Scleral necrosis after plaque radiotherapy of uveal melanoma: A case-control study

Purpose: To identify risk factors and outcome of scleral necrosis after plaque radiotherapy of uveal melanoma. Design: Case-control study. Participants: A total of 73 cases with scleral necrosis and 73 controls without necrosis after plaque radiotherapy. Controls were matched for anteroposterior tum...

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Main Authors: Swathi Kaliki, Carol L. Shields, Duangnate Rojanaporn, Josep Badal, Laxmi Devisetty, Jacqueline Emrich, Lydia Komarnicky, Jerry A. Shields
Other Authors: Thomas Jefferson University
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Published: 2018
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spelling th-mahidol.323752018-10-19T12:26:07Z Scleral necrosis after plaque radiotherapy of uveal melanoma: A case-control study Swathi Kaliki Carol L. Shields Duangnate Rojanaporn Josep Badal Laxmi Devisetty Jacqueline Emrich Lydia Komarnicky Jerry A. Shields Thomas Jefferson University L.V. Prasad Eye Institute India Mahidol University Drexel University Medicine Purpose: To identify risk factors and outcome of scleral necrosis after plaque radiotherapy of uveal melanoma. Design: Case-control study. Participants: A total of 73 cases with scleral necrosis and 73 controls without necrosis after plaque radiotherapy. Controls were matched for anteroposterior tumor epicenter and follow-up duration. Intervention: Plaque radiotherapy with iodine-125, cobalt-60, iridium-192, or ruthenium-106. Main Outcome Measures: Scleral necrosis. Results: Of 5057 patients treated with plaque radiotherapy for uveal melanoma, 73 (1%) developed radiotherapy-induced scleral necrosis. Scleral necrosis occurred in <1% of patients (3/1140) when plaque radiotherapy was used for tumors <3 mm in thickness, 1% of patients (33/3155) with 3- to 8-mm tumor thickness, and 5% of patients (37/762) with >8-mm-thick tumors. On the basis of tumor location, scleral necrosis was detected after plaque radiotherapy of iris melanoma in 0% of patients (0/91), ciliary body melanoma in 29% of patients (67/235), and choroid melanoma in <1% of patients (6/4731). The mean time interval between plaque radiotherapy and scleral necrosis was 32 months (median, 23 months; range, 4-126 months). The mean basal dimension of scleral necrosis was 4 mm (median, 3 mm; range, 1-15 mm), equivalent to 29% of mean tumor base (median, 24%; range, 6%-100%) and 22% of mean plaque size (median, 19%; range, 5%-75%). Multivariate analysis of factors that predicted clinically evident scleral necrosis included ciliary body (P = 0.0001) and pars plana to ora serrata (P < 0.0001) locations of anterior tumor margin, tumor thickness ≥6 mm (P = 0.0001), and radiation dose ≥400 Gy to the outer sclera (P = 0.0455). Scleral necrosis remained stable in 48% of patients (35/73), increased in size/severity in 48% of patients (35/73), or progressed to scleral perforation in 4% of patients (3/73) over a mean follow-up of 79 months (median, 54 months; range, 5-351 months). Treatment of scleral necrosis included observation in 81% of patients (59/73), scleral patch graft in 14% of patients (10/73), and enucleation in 5% of patients (4/73). Conclusions: Scleral necrosis after plaque radiotherapy of uveal melanoma was detected in 1% of cases. Factors predictive of scleral necrosis included increasing tumor thickness, ciliary body and peripheral choroidal location, and higher radiation dose to sclera. Most patients (81%) did not require treatment, and 4% evolved to full-thickness perforation. © 2013 American Academy of Ophthalmology. 2018-10-19T05:26:07Z 2018-10-19T05:26:07Z 2013-05-01 Article Ophthalmology. Vol.120, No.5 (2013), 1004-1011 10.1016/j.ophtha.2012.10.021 15494713 01616420 2-s2.0-84877745683 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/32375 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84877745683&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Medicine
spellingShingle Medicine
Swathi Kaliki
Carol L. Shields
Duangnate Rojanaporn
Josep Badal
Laxmi Devisetty
Jacqueline Emrich
Lydia Komarnicky
Jerry A. Shields
Scleral necrosis after plaque radiotherapy of uveal melanoma: A case-control study
description Purpose: To identify risk factors and outcome of scleral necrosis after plaque radiotherapy of uveal melanoma. Design: Case-control study. Participants: A total of 73 cases with scleral necrosis and 73 controls without necrosis after plaque radiotherapy. Controls were matched for anteroposterior tumor epicenter and follow-up duration. Intervention: Plaque radiotherapy with iodine-125, cobalt-60, iridium-192, or ruthenium-106. Main Outcome Measures: Scleral necrosis. Results: Of 5057 patients treated with plaque radiotherapy for uveal melanoma, 73 (1%) developed radiotherapy-induced scleral necrosis. Scleral necrosis occurred in <1% of patients (3/1140) when plaque radiotherapy was used for tumors <3 mm in thickness, 1% of patients (33/3155) with 3- to 8-mm tumor thickness, and 5% of patients (37/762) with >8-mm-thick tumors. On the basis of tumor location, scleral necrosis was detected after plaque radiotherapy of iris melanoma in 0% of patients (0/91), ciliary body melanoma in 29% of patients (67/235), and choroid melanoma in <1% of patients (6/4731). The mean time interval between plaque radiotherapy and scleral necrosis was 32 months (median, 23 months; range, 4-126 months). The mean basal dimension of scleral necrosis was 4 mm (median, 3 mm; range, 1-15 mm), equivalent to 29% of mean tumor base (median, 24%; range, 6%-100%) and 22% of mean plaque size (median, 19%; range, 5%-75%). Multivariate analysis of factors that predicted clinically evident scleral necrosis included ciliary body (P = 0.0001) and pars plana to ora serrata (P < 0.0001) locations of anterior tumor margin, tumor thickness ≥6 mm (P = 0.0001), and radiation dose ≥400 Gy to the outer sclera (P = 0.0455). Scleral necrosis remained stable in 48% of patients (35/73), increased in size/severity in 48% of patients (35/73), or progressed to scleral perforation in 4% of patients (3/73) over a mean follow-up of 79 months (median, 54 months; range, 5-351 months). Treatment of scleral necrosis included observation in 81% of patients (59/73), scleral patch graft in 14% of patients (10/73), and enucleation in 5% of patients (4/73). Conclusions: Scleral necrosis after plaque radiotherapy of uveal melanoma was detected in 1% of cases. Factors predictive of scleral necrosis included increasing tumor thickness, ciliary body and peripheral choroidal location, and higher radiation dose to sclera. Most patients (81%) did not require treatment, and 4% evolved to full-thickness perforation. © 2013 American Academy of Ophthalmology.
author2 Thomas Jefferson University
author_facet Thomas Jefferson University
Swathi Kaliki
Carol L. Shields
Duangnate Rojanaporn
Josep Badal
Laxmi Devisetty
Jacqueline Emrich
Lydia Komarnicky
Jerry A. Shields
format Article
author Swathi Kaliki
Carol L. Shields
Duangnate Rojanaporn
Josep Badal
Laxmi Devisetty
Jacqueline Emrich
Lydia Komarnicky
Jerry A. Shields
author_sort Swathi Kaliki
title Scleral necrosis after plaque radiotherapy of uveal melanoma: A case-control study
title_short Scleral necrosis after plaque radiotherapy of uveal melanoma: A case-control study
title_full Scleral necrosis after plaque radiotherapy of uveal melanoma: A case-control study
title_fullStr Scleral necrosis after plaque radiotherapy of uveal melanoma: A case-control study
title_full_unstemmed Scleral necrosis after plaque radiotherapy of uveal melanoma: A case-control study
title_sort scleral necrosis after plaque radiotherapy of uveal melanoma: a case-control study
publishDate 2018
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/32375
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