Cancers (Nov 2023)

Long-Term Follow-Up of Patients with Conjunctival Lymphoma after Individualized Lens-Sparing Electron Radiotherapy: Results from a Longitudinal Study

  • Christian Hoffmann,
  • Toke Ringbaek,
  • Anja Eckstein,
  • Wolfgang Deya,
  • Alina Santiago,
  • Martin Heintz,
  • Wolfgang Lübcke,
  • Frank Indenkämpen,
  • Wolfgang Sauerwein,
  • Andrea Flühs,
  • Claudia Le Guin,
  • Andreas Huettmann,
  • Julia von Tresckow,
  • Sophia Göricke,
  • Cornelius Deuschl,
  • Sourour Moliavi,
  • Christoph Poettgen,
  • Thomas Gauler,
  • Nika Guberina,
  • Patricia Johansson,
  • Nikolaos Bechrakis,
  • Martin Stuschke,
  • Maja Guberina

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15225433
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 22
p. 5433

Abstract

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Irradiation with electrons is the primary treatment regime for localized conjunctival low-grade lymphomas. However, radiation-induced cataracts are a major cause of treatment-related morbidity. This study investigates whether lens-sparing electron irradiation produces sufficient disease control rates while preventing cataract formation. All consecutive patients with strictly conjunctival, low-grade Ann Arbor stage IE lymphoma treated with superficial electron irradiation between 1999 and 2021 at our department were reviewed. A total of 56 patients with 65 treated eyes were enrolled with a median follow-up of 65 months. The median dose was 30.96 Gy. A lens-spearing technique featuring a hanging rod blocking the central beam axis was used in 89.2% of all cases. Cumulative incidences of 5- and 10-year infield recurrences were 4.3% and 14.6%, incidences of 5- and 10-year outfield progression were 10.4% and 13.4%. We used patients with involvement of retroorbital structures treated with whole-orbit photon irradiation without lens protection—of which we reported in a previous study—as a control group. The cumulative cataract incidence for patients treated with electrons and lens protection was significantly lower (p = 0.005) when compared to patients irradiated without lens protection. Thus, electrons are an effective treatment option for conjunctival low-grade lymphomas. The presented lens-sparing technique effectively prevents cataract formation.

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