EJC Paediatric Oncology (Jan 2023)

Adjuvant therapy for children treated by enucleation at diagnosis of retinoblastoma

  • Yelena Diarra,
  • Christina Brockmeyer,
  • Karen Fischhuber,
  • Isabel Hülsenbeck,
  • Saskia Ting,
  • Madlen Reschke,
  • Tobias Kiefer,
  • Anna Hannbücken,
  • Maren Wagemanns,
  • Leyla Jabbarli,
  • Selma Sirin,
  • Regina Wieland,
  • Gudrun Fleischhack,
  • Johannes H. Schulte,
  • Martin Ebinger,
  • Dietmar Lohmann,
  • Bert Müller,
  • Daniela Süsskind,
  • Christoph Schwab,
  • Ines Brecht,
  • Angelika Eggert,
  • Stefan Schönberger,
  • Petra Ritter-Sovinz,
  • Nikolaos Bechrakis,
  • Sophia Göricke,
  • Beate Timmermann,
  • Eva Biewald,
  • Petra Ketteler

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1
p. 100004

Abstract

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Introduction: Advanced localized retinoblastoma can be cured by enucleation, but extraocular spread of retinoblastoma cells is associated with a high mortality. Risk-stratified adjuvant treatment with chemotherapy and radiotherapy has been shown to reduce the risk for extraocular relapse in children with histopathological risk factors. Methods: Data of 184 patients with retinoblastoma and primary enucleation were collected in a prospective, multicenter, observational study between 2013 and 2020. The clinical characteristics were evaluated as risk factors and progression-free and overall survival rates were compared. Results: Seventy-one percent of 184 children with retinoblastoma treated with primary enucleation were diagnosed with low risk histopathological factors (pT1/pT2a) and received no adjuvant therapy. Children with intermediate risk (pT2b,pT3; 48 children, 26.0%) and high risk for metastasis (pT4; 5 children, 2.7%) received risk-stratified adjuvant treatment. None of the children with low risk or intermediate risk (pT1-pT3) relapsed, but two of five children with high-risk retinoblastoma (pT4) developed extraocular relapses and one deceased. The 2-year progression-free survival rate and 2-year overall survival rate was 100% for children with pT1-3 retinoblastoma. However, the 2-year progression-free survival rate and 2-year overall survival rate for children with pT4 was statistically notably reduced with 2 of 5 children developing progression and 1 death among the 5 children within 2 years after diagnosis. Conclusion: Primary enucleation alone and with additional risk-stratified adjuvant chemotherapy treatment provides high cure rates in patients with pT1-3 retinoblastoma, but children with pT4 retinoblastoma remain at high risk to develop extraocular retinoblastoma. International prospective clinical trials are required to evaluate reduction of intensity of adjuvant chemotherapy in some risk groups (pT2, pT3) and intensification for pT4 retinoblastoma.

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