TY - JOUR
T1 - Current indications of secondary enucleation in retinoblastoma management
T2 - A position paper on behalf of the european retinoblastoma group (eurbg)
AU - Stathopoulos, Christina
AU - Lumbroso-le Rouic, Livia
AU - Moll, Annette C.
AU - Parulekar, Manoj
AU - Maeder, Philippe
AU - Doz, François
AU - Jenkinson, Helen
AU - Popovic, Maja Beck
AU - Chantada, Guillermo
AU - Munier, Francis L.
PY - 2021/7/2
Y1 - 2021/7/2
N2 - Secondary enucleation (SE) puts an irreversible end to eye-preserving therapies, whenever their prolongation is expected to violate the presumed state of metastatic grace. At present, it must be acknowledged that clear criteria for SE are missing, leading to empiric and subjective indications commonly related to disease progression or relapse, disease persistence masking the optic nerve head or treatment-related complications obscuring the fundus view. This absence of evidence-based consensus regarding SE is explained by the continuously moving frontiers of the conservative management as a result of diagnostic and therapeutic advances, as well as by the lack of studies sufficiently powered to accurately stratify the risk of metastasis in conservatively treated patients. In this position paper of the European Retinoblastoma Group (EURbG), we give an overview of the progressive shift in the indications for SE over the past decades and propose guidelines to assist decision-making with respect to when SE becomes imperative or recommended, with corresponding absolute and relative SE indications. Further studies and validation of biologic markers correlated with the risk of metastasis are expected to set more precisely the frontiers of conservative management and thus consensual criteria for SE in the future.
AB - Secondary enucleation (SE) puts an irreversible end to eye-preserving therapies, whenever their prolongation is expected to violate the presumed state of metastatic grace. At present, it must be acknowledged that clear criteria for SE are missing, leading to empiric and subjective indications commonly related to disease progression or relapse, disease persistence masking the optic nerve head or treatment-related complications obscuring the fundus view. This absence of evidence-based consensus regarding SE is explained by the continuously moving frontiers of the conservative management as a result of diagnostic and therapeutic advances, as well as by the lack of studies sufficiently powered to accurately stratify the risk of metastasis in conservatively treated patients. In this position paper of the European Retinoblastoma Group (EURbG), we give an overview of the progressive shift in the indications for SE over the past decades and propose guidelines to assist decision-making with respect to when SE becomes imperative or recommended, with corresponding absolute and relative SE indications. Further studies and validation of biologic markers correlated with the risk of metastasis are expected to set more precisely the frontiers of conservative management and thus consensual criteria for SE in the future.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85108986853&origin=inward
UR - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34298608
U2 - 10.3390/cancers13143392
DO - 10.3390/cancers13143392
M3 - Article
C2 - 34298608
SN - 2072-6694
VL - 13
JO - Cancers (Basel)
JF - Cancers (Basel)
IS - 14
M1 - 3392
ER -