Abstract

Retinoblastoma is the most common primary malignant intraocular cancer that usually develops in early childhood. About 5% of those patients are at risk of developing trilateral retinoblastoma (TRB). In developing countries, most of them came in the late stage; therefore, ocular and patient survival rates are lower than in developed countries. From 2015–2019, we found four cases of trilateral retinoblastoma. Two of them had bilateral retinoblastoma, and two had unilateral retinoblastoma. They all presented with leukocoria and had no family history of retinoblastoma. The mean age was 13.8 months (range 9–24 months of age). The diagnosis of trilateral retinoblastoma was made from initial head CT/MRI. They were treated conservatively with high dose VEC chemotherapy, and three of them have died during treatment. Trilateral retinoblastoma is usually fatal and needs multidisciplinary treatment care. In developing countries, it is important to evaluate distant metastasis. Head CT or MRI from the initial diagnosis to exclude the trilateral retinoblastoma.

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