Transcript Slide 1
CPC
Alethea Hein
Clinical History
• 53y/o M w/ decreased vision in right eye x
2weeks
• Seen by retina specialist & diagnosed with
choroidal melanoma
Clinical Exam
• Vision:
– Right eye: 20/50-2
– Left eye: 20/20
• Color vision:
– Right eye: 7/13
– Left eye: 13/13
• Visual fields:
• Anterior segment:
– Bilateral trace nuclear sclerosis,
otherwise normal
• Fundus exam:
– Right eye:
• Optic nerve head obscurred by
mass
• Inferior nasal mushroom
shaped, amelanotic mass at 4-5
o’clock, on a base of pigmented,
flatter mass, with serous retinal
detachment 3-6 o’clock
– Left eye: wnl
• B-scan right eye: mushroomshaped choroidal mass with
low internal reflectivity
Assessment and Plan
• Choroidal melanoma with amelanotic
mushroom component and secondary retinal
detachment – right eye
– Discussed enucleation vs. Brachytherapy with
plaque radiation.
– Patient chose enucleation
*
Fundus Photo
Optos photo of right eye showing infranasal mass (*) with partial
obscurration of the optic nerve head. Also visible is a retinal detachment
(white arrow) surrounding mass.
Fluorescein Angiogram
Arterial phase of angiogram.
The mass has good perfusion.
Venous phase of angiogram. Mass and area
of retinal detachment have increased signal
suggesting leakage of fluorescein from
blood vessels.
Recirculation phase of angiogram continues to show hyperfluorescent mass
and area surrounding mass which corresponds to retinal detachment. Shows
that there is leakage of fluorescein from the blood vessels.
Pathology Slides
Surgical Pathology #: PHS10-17321
Highly cellular mass (blue arrow)overlying area of proteinaceous fluid (white arrow)
Blue arrow: Can see that the mass is sub-retinal
Mass contains spindle B cells
More spindle B cells and many blood vessels
PAS. Break in Bruch’s membrane by mass
PAS. Again, can see break in bruch’s membrane
PAS stain. Showing ciliary body with thickened epithelial basement membrane
Melanoma cells extend along blood vessels into the sclera, but only slightly.
Melin A melanocyte marker –
shows melanocytes (red) around a blood vessel within an emissary canal
KI-67 shows proliferating cells. Shows more proliferation than would see with a nevus.
Diagnosis
• Choroidal melanoma
Discussion
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Median Age: 55yrs
M>F
Caucasians>>African Americans (15:1)
Unilateral most common
Blue irides>Brown irides
Intense exposure to UV light increases risk
Bilateral primary melanoma ~1.8% of uveal melanoma
patients
• Most common presentation: mass found on routine
examination or after complaint of blurred vision.
• Neural retinal detachment seen in ~75% of cases
Clinical Classification
Largest Diameter (mm)
Largest Elevation (mm)
Very Small
</= 7.0
</= 2.0
Small
7.7-10
2.1-3.0
Medium
10.1-15.0
3.1-5.0
Large
>15.0
>5.0
5 Risk Factors for Growth of Small
Melanocytic Choroidal Tumors
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Tumor thickness >2mm
Posterior tumor margin touching disc
Visual symptoms
Orange pigment
Subretinal Fluid
Callender Classification and Prognosis
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Spindle A
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Spindle B
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Rarest type (3%)
Noncohesive cells with large, round nuclei
Prominent nucleoli
Mitotic figures are common
Survival rate ~28%
Mixed
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Common (39%)
Cohesive cells with spindled nuclei with distinct nucleoli
~6% form a palisaded arrangement called a fascicular pattern
Mitotic figures are rare
Survival rate: ~75%
Epithelioid
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2nd rarest type (5%)
Cohesive cells that contain small, spindled nuclei having central dark stripe
No distinct nucleoli
Mitotic figures are rare
Survival rate: ~92%
Most common type (45%)
Contains both a significnt spindle cell component and an epithelioid cell component
Survival rate ~41%
Necrotic
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Uncommon (7%)
Cell type not identifiable because tumor is so necrotic
Best Indicators of Prognosis
• Size
– <1cm cubed = very favorable prognosis
– >1cm cubed = poor prognosis
• Cell type
• Scleral extension
• Mitotic Activity
Clinical Features to Help Predict
Metastasis
• Posterior tumor location touching the optic
nerve
• Increased Tumor thickness
• Symptoms of blurred vision
• Documented tumor enlargement
Associated Findings
• Invasion of Bruch’s membrane ~63% of tumors
– If membrane intact, tumor is oval in shape
– If membrane ruptured, tumor is mushroom shaped
• Invasion of scleral canals ~32% of tumors
• Invasion of optic nerve ~5% of tumors
• Invasion of vortex veins ~13% of tumors
– Vortex veins should be sampled on all enucleated globes
– Vortex vein invasion carries extremely unfavorable prognosis
• Neural retinal detachment present in ~75%
• Extraocular extension ~13% of tumors
• If tumor is transected during enucleation, recurrence rate is
~50%
Associated Cytology
• Positive for S-100, HMB-45, Ki-67
Interesting Tidbit
• ~4% of eyes with opaque media enucleated
from white patients (blind for ~6mos) harbor
malignant melanoma
Differential Diagnosis
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Hemorrhage
Cyst
Serous retinal detachment
Subretinal neovascularization
Tumor (hemangioma, nevus, metastatic
carcinoma, lymphoma & lesions of pigmented
epithelium)
• Bilateral Diffuse Uveal Melanocytic Proliferation
(BDUMP)
Treatment Options
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Enucleation
Plaque Brachytherapy
Charged Particle Radiotherapy
Transpupillary Thermotherapy
Stereotactic Radiotherapy
Local Resection
Our Patient’s Tumor and Prognosis
• Size:
– <1cm cubed = very favorable prognosis
• Cell type: Spindle B (survival rate with Spindle
B: 75%)
• Scleral extension: yes, but minimal
• Mitotic Activity: low mitotic activity
• Therefore: good prognosis
Summary
• Choroidal Melanoma with favorable prognosis
• Ciliary body basement membrane thickening
of unknown significance. May indicate
underlying diabetic process.
Sources
• Basic Clinical Science Course Section 12:
Retina and Vitreous. American Academy of
Ophthalmology 2008-2009
• Yanoff, Myron and Fine, Ben. Ocular
Pathology. Mosby. 2002