Management of metastatic carcinoma of the uveal tract: an evidence-based analysis

Date

2007

Authors

Kanthan, Gowri
Jayamohan, Jay
Yip, Desmond
Conway, R. Max

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Blackwell Science Asia

Abstract

Uveal metastasis from carcinoma is the most common cause of ocular malignancy in adults and represents an increasing problem in the context of an ageing population and enhanced survival of stage IV cancer patients. The reported prevalence of clinically evident uveal metastases in carcinoma patients ranges from 2% to 9%, with breast and lung cancer together accounting for between 71% and 92% of cases. Most patients (66-97%) have a known history of cancer and, although the majority have metastatic lesions elsewhere, up to 33% may present with an isolated ocular metastasis. These lesions may progress rapidly and are potentially sight-threatening. Early diagnosis and appropriate timely treatment are therefore of paramount importance to maintain patients' quality of life. The diagnosis is usually clinical and detailed descriptions of symptomatology and physical characteristics are provided. In 21-50% of patients, involvement is bilateral. External beam radiotherapy (EBRT), chemotherapy, hormone and biological therapies, brachytherapy, transpupillary thermotherapy, laser photocoagulation/ photodynamic therapy and enucleation are therapeutic modalities described in the literature for the management of uveal metastases. The strongest evidence favours timely EBRT for the management of sight-threatening uveal metastases. The published evidence supporting EBRT for sight-threatening uveal metastases was given a grade B (strong support for recommendation). Newer alternative therapies are emerging and may have a role in selected patients; however, there are unfortunately few large studies examining such treatments for carcinoma metastatic to the eye. The role of these modalities will be further clarified with the results of larger comparative trials.

Description

Keywords

Keywords: anastrozole; anthracycline derivative; antiestrogen; aromatase inhibitor; buserelin; capecitabine; carboplatin; cisplatin; cyclophosphamide; cytotoxic agent; docetaxel; doxorubicin; epirubicin; erlotinib; etoposide; fluorouracil; gonadorelin agonist; gose Carcinoma; Chemotherapy; Metastases; Radiotherapy; Uvea

Citation

Source

Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology

Type

Journal article

Book Title

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Restricted until

2037-12-31