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  4. Conservative management of retinoblastoma: Challenging orthodoxy without compromising the state of metastatic grace. "Alive, with good vision and no comorbidity"
 
review article

Conservative management of retinoblastoma: Challenging orthodoxy without compromising the state of metastatic grace. "Alive, with good vision and no comorbidity"

Munier, Francis L.
•
Beck-Popovic, Maja
•
Chantada, Guillermo L.
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November 1, 2019
Progress In Retinal And Eye Research

Retinoblastoma is lethal by metastasis if left untreated, so the primary goal of therapy is to preserve life, with ocular survival, visual preservation and quality of life as secondary aims. Historically, enucleation was the first successful therapeutic approach to decrease mortality, followed over 100 years ago by the first eye salvage attempts with radiotherapy. This led to the empiric delineation of a window for conservative management subject to a "state of metastatic grace" never to be violated.

Over the last two decades, conservative management of retinoblastoma witnessed an impressive acceleration of improvements, culminating in two major paradigm shifts in therapeutic strategy. Firstly, the introduction of systemic chemotherapy and focal treatments in the late 1990s enabled radiotherapy to be progressively abandoned. Around 10 years later, the advent of chemotherapy in situ, with the capitalization of new routes of targeted drug delivery, namely intra-arterial, intravitreal and now intracameral injections, allowed significant increase in eye preservation rate, definitive eradication of radiotherapy and reduction of systemic chemotherapy.

Here we intend to review the relevant knowledge susceptible to improve the conservative management of retinoblastoma in compliance with the "state of metastatic grace", with particular attention to (i) reviewing how new imaging modalities impact the frontiers of conservative management, (ii) dissecting retinoblastoma genesis, growth patterns, and intraocular routes of tumor propagation, (iii) assessing major therapeutic changes and trends, (iv) proposing a classification of relapsing retinoblastoma, (v) examining treatable/preventable disease-related or treatment-induced complications, and (vi) appraising new therapeutic targets and concepts, as well as liquid biopsy potentiality.

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Type
review article
DOI
10.1016/j.preteyeres.2019.05.005
Web of Science ID

WOS:000502892800001

Author(s)
Munier, Francis L.
•
Beck-Popovic, Maja
•
Chantada, Guillermo L.
•
Cobrinik, David
•
Kivela, Tero T.
•
Lohmann, Dietmar
•
Maeder, Philippe
•
Moll, Annette C.
•
Carcaboso, Angel Montero
•
Moulin, Alexandre
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Date Issued

2019-11-01

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD

Published in
Progress In Retinal And Eye Research
Volume

73

Article Number

100764

Subjects

Ophthalmology

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Ophthalmology

•

retinoblastoma

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treatment

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intra-arterial chemotherapy

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intravitreal chemotherapy

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intracameral chemotherapy

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complication

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metastasis

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liquid biopsy

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ophthalmic-artery-chemosurgery

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external-beam radiotherapy

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rhegmatogenous retinal-detachment

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optical coherence tomography

•

diffuse infiltrating retinoblastoma

•

radiation-induced cataracts

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high-risk retinoblastoma

•

2nd primary malignancies

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long-term survivors

•

quality-of-life

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LCOM  
Available on Infoscience
January 2, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/164311
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