| Literature DB >> 28050274 |
Katleen Janssens1, Michelle Mertens1, Noémie Lauwers2, Rob J W de Keizer3, Danny G P Mathysen4, Veva De Groot4.
Abstract
Purpose. To analyze and describe corneal and conjunctival tumor thickness and internal characteristics and extension in depth and size and shape measured by two noninvasive techniques, anterior segment optical coherence tomography (AS-OCT) and ultrasound biomicroscopy (UBM). Design. Systematic review. Methods. This systematic review is based on a comprehensive search of 4 databases (Medline, Embase, Web of Science, and Cochrane Library). Articles published between January 1, 1999, and December 31, 2015, were included. We searched for articles using the following search terms in various combinations: "optical coherence tomography", "ultrasound biomicroscopy", "corneal neoplasm", "conjunctival neoplasm", "eye", "tumor" and "anterior segment tumors". Inclusion criteria were as follows: UBM and/or AS-OCT was used; the study included corneal or conjunctival tumors; and the article was published in English, French, Dutch, or German. Results. There were 14 sources selected. Discussion. Several studies on the quality of AS-OCT and UBM show that these imaging techniques provide useful information about the internal features, extension, size, and shape of tumors. Yet there is no enough evidence on the advantages and disadvantages of UBM and AS-OCT in certain tumor types. Conclusion. More comparative studies are needed to investigate which imaging technique is most suitable for a certain tumor type.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28050274 PMCID: PMC5168478 DOI: 10.1155/2016/1048760
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ophthalmol ISSN: 2090-004X Impact factor: 1.909
Figure 1Flow diagram of literature search.
Articles using UBM in conjunctival and corneal tumors.
| Author, year | Study | Number of patients | Imaging technique | Aim | Tumor type | Results | Conclusion |
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| Lanzl et al., 1998 | The role of ultrasound biomicroscopy in surgical planning for limbal dermoids—study design not given | 2 | UBM (50 MHz) | To investigate the use of ultrasound biomicroscopy (UBM) examination for surgical planning in limbal dermoids | Infantile limbal dermoid |
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| Grant and Azar, 1999 | Ultrasound biomicroscopy in the diagnosis and management of limbal dermoid—study design not given | 1 | UBM (type of probe not mentioned) | To report the use of ultrasound biomicroscopy in the diagnosis and management of limbal dermoid | Limbal dermoid | Clinical examination, ultrasound biomicroscopy, biopsy confirmed the diagnosis of limbal dermoid |
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| Hoops et al., 2001 | Preoperative evaluation of limbal dermoids using high resolution biomicroscopy—retrospective analysis | 8 | High resolution biomicroscopy (50 MHz) | To assess whether ultrasound biomicroscopy (UBM) can detect the corneal depth of penetration of dermoids which could improve planning of surgery | Limbal dermoids | (i) 7/8: UBM showed a more reflective and predominantly homogeneous lesion compared with the unaffected corneal stroma, so that the lateral margins of the lesion could be clearly identified |
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| Buchwald et al., 2003 | Ultrasound biomicroscopy of conjunctival lesions—prospective study | 28 | UBM (30 MHz) | To determine the value of UBM in the diagnosis of conjunctival lesions | 28 conjunctival lesions: Compound nevus (8/28), cysts (6/28), inflammatory processes (3/28), granulomatous processes (2/28), lymphomas (2/28), foreign bodies (2/28), pterygium (2/28), malignant melanoma (1/28), primary acquired melanosis (1/28), conjunctival amyloidosis (1/28) |
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| Lin et al., 2004 | Ultrasound Biomicroscopy in Pigmented Conjunctival Cystic Nevi—study design not given | 2 | UBM (type of probe not mentioned) | To report the use of UBM in the clinical diagnosis and management of pigmented conjunctival cystic nevi | 2 conjunctival lesions: raised melanocytic lesions localized on the conjunctiva characterised by rapid growth; they were suspected to be inflamed juvenile conjunctival nevi |
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| Ho et al., 2007 | Ultrasound biomicroscopy for estimation of tumor thickness for conjunctival melanoma—retrospective review | 3 | UBM (50 MHz) | To assess the feasibility of using high frequency UBM in estimating thickness of conjunctival melanomas preoperatively | Conjunctival melanoma (3) | Patient 1: UBM thickness = 1.99 mm and Breslow thickness = 1.5 mm |
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Articles using AS-OCT in conjunctival and corneal tumors.
| Author, year | Study | Number of patients | Imaging technique | Aim | Tumor type | Results | Conclusion |
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| Shields et al., 2011 | Anterior segment optical coherence tomography of conjunctival nevus—retrospective interventional case series | 22 eyes of 21 patients | AS-OCT (1310 nm) | To evaluate conjunctival nevi using AS-OCT | Conjunctival nevi (22) |
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| Welch et al., 2011 | Pterygia measurements are more accurate with anterior segment optical coherence tomography (a pilot study)—study design not given | 13 | AS-OCT (wavelength not mentioned) | To compare standard slit-lamp beam measurements of pterygia to computer caliper measurements of AS-OCT images | Pterygia |
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| Shousha et al., 2011 | Diagnosis and management of conjunctival and corneal intraepithelial neoplasia using ultrahigh resolution optical coherence tomography—prospective, noncomparative, interventional case series | 7 | UHR-OCT (870 nm) | To report a novel diagnostic technique and a case series of CCIN diagnosed and followed up using prototype UHR-OCT | Conjunctival and corneal intraepithelial neoplasia (CCIN) |
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| Kieval et al., 2012 | Ultrahigh resolution optical coherence tomography for differentiation of ocular surface squamous neoplasia (OSSN) and pterygia—prospective case series | 34 eyes of 34 patients | UHR-OCT (840 nm) | To assess the use of an UHR-OCT as an adjuvant diagnostic tool in distinguishing OSSN and pterygia | Conjunctival lesions (34) clinically suspicious for OSSN or pterygia |
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| Shousha et al., 2013 | Diagnosis of ocular surface lesions using ultrahigh resolution optical coherence tomography—prospective, noncomparative, interventional case series | 54 | UHR-OCT (840 nm) | To assess the use of ultrahigh resolution (UHR) optical coherence tomography (OCT) in the diagnosis of ocular surface lesions | 24 conjunctival lesions, 19 corneoconjunctival lesions, 11 corneal lesions: primary acquired melanosis lesions (8/54), amelanotic melanoma lesions (5/54), nevi (2/54), ocular surface squamous neoplasia lesions (19/54), histiocytosis lesion (1/54), conjunctival lymphoma lesions (6/54), conjunctival amyloidosis lesions (2/54), pterygia lesions (11/54) |
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| Nanji et al., 2015 | High resolution optical coherence tomography as an adjunctive tool in the diagnosis of corneal and conjunctival pathology—prospective case series | 82 | HR-OCT (830 nm) | To evaluate the use of a commercially available, high resolution, spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (HR-OCT) device in the diagnosis of corneal and conjunctival pathologies, with a focus on malignant lesions | Location of lesions not mentioned: Normal eyes (10), OSSN (21), pterygium or pingueculum (24), lymphoma (3), pigmented conjunctival lesions (nevus, flat melanosis, or melanoma) (18) and Salzmann nodular degeneration (6) |
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Articles describing the use of UBM and AS-OCT in conjunctival and corneal tumors.
| Author, year | Study | Number of patients | Imaging technique | Aim | Tumor type | Results | Conclusion |
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| Buchwald et al., 2003 | Optical coherence tomography versus ultrasound biomicroscopy of conjunctival and eyelid lesions—prospective study | 38 tumors of 35 patients | UBM (30 MHz) and AS-OCT (1310 nm) | To compare the value of UBM and AS-OCT in the diagnosis of conjunctival and eyelid lesions | 13 conjunctival lesions and 25 eyelid lesions: |
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| Bianciotto et al., 2011 | Assessment of anterior segment tumors with ultrasound biomicroscopy versus anterior segment optical coherence tomography in 200 cases—retrospective, noninterventional case series | 200 | UBM (50 MHz probe) and AS-OCT (1310 nm) | To compare UBM versus AS-OCT for imaging of tumors of the anterior segment of the eye | 6 conjunctival lesions (diagnosis not mentioned), 0 corneal lesions, 194 other locations: |
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