Retinal vasoproliferative tumors: Comparative clinical features of primary vs secondary tumors in 334 cases
Objective: To compare the clinical features of primary vs secondary retinal vasoproliferative tumors (VPTs). Methods: Retrospective case series of 334 tumors in 295 eyes of 275 patients. Results: Of 275 patients with VPT, 41% (n=113) were male and 59% (n=162) were female, with a mean age of 44 years...
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th-mahidol.324692018-10-19T12:30:45Z Retinal vasoproliferative tumors: Comparative clinical features of primary vs secondary tumors in 334 cases Carol L. Shields Swathi Kaliki Saad Al-Dahmash Duangnate Rojanaporn Shripaad Y. Shukla Brad Reilly Jerry A. Shields Thomas Jefferson University King Saud University Medical College Mahidol University Medicine Objective: To compare the clinical features of primary vs secondary retinal vasoproliferative tumors (VPTs). Methods: Retrospective case series of 334 tumors in 295 eyes of 275 patients. Results: Of 275 patients with VPT, 41% (n=113) were male and 59% (n=162) were female, with a mean age of 44 years at presentation. Primary VPT occurred in 80% (n=219) and secondary VPT, in 20% (n=56) of patients. Secondary VPT (n=67) occurred in eyes with retinitis pigmentosa (n=15, 22%), pars planitis (n=14, 21%), Coats disease (n=11, 16%), previous retinal detachment surgery (n=8, 12%), idiopathic peripheral retinal vasculitis (n=4, 6%), familial exudative vitreoretinopathy (n=3, 4%), and others (n=12, 18%). The mean interval between diagnosis of underlying ocular condition and secondary VPT was 160 months. Statistically significant differences (P<.05) in clinical features (primary vs secondary VPTs) included mean age at presentation (46 vs 38 years), visual symptoms (74% vs 87%), poor visual acuity worse than 20/200 (15% vs 28%), bilaterality (4% vs 20%), multifocality (5% vs 15%), postequatorial tumor location (20% vs 33%), tumor basal dimension (6 vs 7 mm), anterior chamber cells (16% vs 30%), and vitreous cells (19% vs 48%). Conclusions: Retinal vasoproliferative tumor can be primary (80%) or secondary (20%). Compared with primary VPT, secondary VPT is more often bilateral, multiple, and larger and occurs at an earlier age associated with poorer visual acuity. © 2013 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. 2018-10-19T05:30:45Z 2018-10-19T05:30:45Z 2013-03-01 Article JAMA Ophthalmology. Vol.131, No.3 (2013), 328-334 10.1001/2013.jamaophthalmol.524 21686165 2-s2.0-84875181953 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/32469 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84875181953&origin=inward |
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Medicine Carol L. Shields Swathi Kaliki Saad Al-Dahmash Duangnate Rojanaporn Shripaad Y. Shukla Brad Reilly Jerry A. Shields Retinal vasoproliferative tumors: Comparative clinical features of primary vs secondary tumors in 334 cases |
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Objective: To compare the clinical features of primary vs secondary retinal vasoproliferative tumors (VPTs). Methods: Retrospective case series of 334 tumors in 295 eyes of 275 patients. Results: Of 275 patients with VPT, 41% (n=113) were male and 59% (n=162) were female, with a mean age of 44 years at presentation. Primary VPT occurred in 80% (n=219) and secondary VPT, in 20% (n=56) of patients. Secondary VPT (n=67) occurred in eyes with retinitis pigmentosa (n=15, 22%), pars planitis (n=14, 21%), Coats disease (n=11, 16%), previous retinal detachment surgery (n=8, 12%), idiopathic peripheral retinal vasculitis (n=4, 6%), familial exudative vitreoretinopathy (n=3, 4%), and others (n=12, 18%). The mean interval between diagnosis of underlying ocular condition and secondary VPT was 160 months. Statistically significant differences (P<.05) in clinical features (primary vs secondary VPTs) included mean age at presentation (46 vs 38 years), visual symptoms (74% vs 87%), poor visual acuity worse than 20/200 (15% vs 28%), bilaterality (4% vs 20%), multifocality (5% vs 15%), postequatorial tumor location (20% vs 33%), tumor basal dimension (6 vs 7 mm), anterior chamber cells (16% vs 30%), and vitreous cells (19% vs 48%). Conclusions: Retinal vasoproliferative tumor can be primary (80%) or secondary (20%). Compared with primary VPT, secondary VPT is more often bilateral, multiple, and larger and occurs at an earlier age associated with poorer visual acuity. © 2013 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. |
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Thomas Jefferson University |
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Thomas Jefferson University Carol L. Shields Swathi Kaliki Saad Al-Dahmash Duangnate Rojanaporn Shripaad Y. Shukla Brad Reilly Jerry A. Shields |
format |
Article |
author |
Carol L. Shields Swathi Kaliki Saad Al-Dahmash Duangnate Rojanaporn Shripaad Y. Shukla Brad Reilly Jerry A. Shields |
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Carol L. Shields |
title |
Retinal vasoproliferative tumors: Comparative clinical features of primary vs secondary tumors in 334 cases |
title_short |
Retinal vasoproliferative tumors: Comparative clinical features of primary vs secondary tumors in 334 cases |
title_full |
Retinal vasoproliferative tumors: Comparative clinical features of primary vs secondary tumors in 334 cases |
title_fullStr |
Retinal vasoproliferative tumors: Comparative clinical features of primary vs secondary tumors in 334 cases |
title_full_unstemmed |
Retinal vasoproliferative tumors: Comparative clinical features of primary vs secondary tumors in 334 cases |
title_sort |
retinal vasoproliferative tumors: comparative clinical features of primary vs secondary tumors in 334 cases |
publishDate |
2018 |
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https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/32469 |
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1763488614855999488 |