Abstract

Plaque brachytherapy has been a mainstay of treatment for choroidal melanoma to achieve intraocular tumor control. The most common radioisotopes used for treating smaller sized tumors are Iodine-125 in North America and Ruthenium-106 in Europe. Proton beam radiotherapy is available at a few centers and may also be used to achieve local tumor control. Both plaque and proton beam therapy are known to be associated with a range of complications that may affect visual outcome and quality of life. These include radiation retinopathy, optic neuropathy, neovascular glaucoma and local treatment failure, requiring enucleation. While differences in the rates of these complications have not been well established in the literature for patients treated with plaque versus proton beam therapy for choroidal melanoma, certain geographic regions prefer one treatment modality over the other. The purpose of this qualitative systematic review was to compare and contrast reported complications that developed with plaque and proton beam therapy for the treatment of choroidal melanoma in studies published over a ten-year period. Reported rates suggest that patients with proton beam therapy had potentially higher rates of complications, including vision loss, enucleation, and neovascular glaucoma compared to those with plaque therapy. The rates of optic neuropathy, radiation retinopathy, and cataract formation were widely variable for the two treatment modalities and rates of metastasis and metastasis-free survival appeared similar with both treatments. The most common reported predictors of ocular complications following both types of therapy were tumor distance from the optic nerve, tumor thickness, and radiation dose, suggesting that inherent tumor characteristics play a role in visual prognosis.

Highlights

  • Choroidal melanoma, known as posterior uveal melanoma, arises from melanocytes within the choroid

  • This review described the rates of a variety of complications following treatment with plaque versus proton beam therapy for patients with choroidal melanoma

  • In our descriptive comparisons of the rates of complications following the two different treatment modalities, patients with proton beam therapy have potentially higher rates of vision loss, enucleation, and neovascular glaucoma after treatment when compared to patients with plaque therapy

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Summary

Introduction

Known as posterior uveal melanoma, arises from melanocytes within the choroid. It is the most common primary intraocular tumor of adults and the second most common type of malignant melanoma after cutaneous melanoma. In 2001, the Collaborative Ocular Melanoma Study (COMS) reported no difference in mortality 12 years following treatment with iodine-125 brachytherapy versus enucleation for medium sized tumors [6]. Brachytherapy has been a globe-sparing treatment of choice, while enucleation may be recommended for large tumors. Proton beam radiotherapy is another globe-sparing treatment alternative for both medium and large choroidal melanoma [7]

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