Abstract

A review of 400 consecutive patients with retinoblastoma disclosed that 103 tumors in 103 eyes were treated with solitary plaque radiotherapy. The tumors were from 1 to 16 mm (mean, 7 mm) in basal diameter and from 1 to 8 mm (mean, 4 mm) in thickness. Thirty-one tumors were treated with plaque radiotherapy as initial treatment, whereas 72 tumors were treated with plaque radiotherapy as secondary treatment after failure of other methods. Of the 102 tumors on which adequate follow-up data were available, all responded initially to plaque radiotherapy with tumor regression. Over the mean follow-up of 38 months (range, six to 192 months), 89 tumors (87%) showed persistent regression and 13 (13%) showed tumor recurrence. The recurrence occurred at a mean interval of five months (range, one to 11 months) after plaque radiotherapy. A statistical analysis of tumor size, tumor location, tumor proximity to the optic disk and foveola, presence of vitreous seeds, radioactive plaque diameter, plaque shape, radioisotope, and primary or secondary treatment disclosed no important predictors of tumor recurrence. Carefully selected retinoblastoma, even juxtapapillary and macular tumors and those with localized vitreous seeds, can be successfully treated with plaque radiotherapy.

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