Abstract

Over an 11-year period, 59 patients (83 eyes) were treated with four-drug chemotherapy (cisplatin, etoposide, cyclophosphamide, and vincristine) at Hacettepe University, Departments of Ophthalmology and Pediatric Oncology. We evaluated the clinical features, treatment modalities, and outcome of these patients with a median follow-up of 55 months (range 9–130 months). Enucleation was performed as a first-line treatment for 30 eyes due to iris neovascularization and neovascular glaucoma, tumor in the anterior chamber regardless of the tumor stage, and for the patients with the Reese–Ellsworth (RE) group Vb. Chemotherapy was given regardless of tumor stages according to the RE groups in all 59 patients (83 eyes). Fifty-three eyes were treated with chemoreduction (CRD) and focal treatment. The rates of globe preservation were 87% for bilateral tumors and 35% for unilateral tumors in the CRD group. The 5-year overall (OS) and enucleation-free survival (EnFS) was 86.9% and 40%, respectively, for the whole group. At 3rd year, ocular survival rate for the eyes with vitreal or subretinal seeding was 58% and without seeding was 66% (P = .78). Seeding or subretinal collection may not indicate poor prognosis under intensive chemotherapy. The intensive four-drug chemotherapy protocol might have satisfactory results in the retinoblastoma (RBL) patients.

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