| Literature DB >> 28744830 |
Alex Fonollosa1,2, Jose Gabriel Vargas-Kelsh3, Gonzaga Garay-Aramburu4,5, Angel Saiz4, Ignacio Zabalza-Estevez6, Ricardo Fernandez7.
Abstract
Intraocular metastasis of cutaneous melanoma is extremely infrequent. This typically occurs in advanced metastatic disease and has a poor survival prognosis. The most frequent reported treatment is radiotherapy. BRAF inhibitors are new, orally administered and very effective drugs used for metastatic cutaneous melanoma. Herein, we report a case of a 58-year-old patient with a recent diagnosis of cutaneous melanoma who consulted for floaters and presented vitreous opacities in both eyes. A diagnostic vitrectomy of his left eye was performed and pathologic analysis disclosed infiltrating melanoma cells in the vitreous. Treatment with dabrafenib (a type of BRAF inhibitor) achieved the regression of the intraocular metastasis in the right eye. Moreover, the patient presented a severe anterior uveitis due to dabrafenib, a well-known secondary effect of this drug.Entities:
Keywords: Cutaneous melanoma; Dabrafenib; Intraocular metastatic cutaneous melanoma; Metastatic cutaneous melanoma; Uveitis
Year: 2017 PMID: 28744830 PMCID: PMC5526823 DOI: 10.1186/s12348-017-0135-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ophthalmic Inflamm Infect ISSN: 1869-5760
Fig. 1Imaging on admission. a and b Retinographies showing dense vitreous opacities; a: right eye, b: left eye. c and d: optical coherence tomography showing hyperreflective bands anterior to the retina (blue arrows); c right eye, d: left eye
Fig. 2Pathologic analysis showing dissociated cells forming irregular groups with atypia (a–c), positive for HMB45 by inmunohistochemistry (d) consistent with a metastatic origin from a cutaneous melanoma
Fig. 3Retinographies after diagnostic vitrectomy performed in the left eye
Fig. 4Retinographies performed after 16 weeks of dabrafenib treatment showing complete resolution of vitreous opacities in the right eye