| Literature DB >> 31124483 |
Sameeksha H Tadepalli1, Carol L Shields2, Jerry A Shields2, Santosh G Honavar3.
Abstract
Intraocular medulloepithelioma is a nonhereditary neoplasm of childhood arising from primitive medullary epithelium. It most often involves the ciliary body. Most patients present between 2 and 10 years of age with loss of vision, pain, leucocoria, or conjunctival congestion. The mass appears as a grey-white ciliary body lesion with intratumoral cysts. Presence of a neoplastic cyclitic membrane with extension to retrolental region is characteristic. Secondary manifestations like cataract and neovascular glaucoma may be present in up to 50% and 60% patients, respectively. These could be the first signs for which, unfortunately, about 50% patients undergo surgery before recognition of the hidden tumor. Systemic correlation with pleuropulmonary blastoma (DICER1 gene) has been documented in 5% cases. Histopathology shows primitive neuroepithelial cells arranged as cords closely resembling the primitive retina. Histopathologically, the tumor is classified as teratoid (containing heteroplastic elements) and nonteratoid (containing medullary epithelial elements), each of which are further subclassified as benign or malignant. Retinoblastoma-like and sarcoma-like areas may be seen within the tissue. The treatment modality depends on tumor size and extent of invasion. For small localized tumors (≤3-4 clock hours), conservative treatments with cryotherapy, plaque radiotherapy, or partial lamellar sclerouvectomy (PLSU) have been used. Plaque brachytherapy is generally preferred for best tumor control. Advanced and extensive tumors require enucleation. Rare use of intra-arterial and intravitreal chemotherapy has been employed. Systemic prognosis is favorable, but those with extraocular extension and orbital involvement show risk for local recurrence and metastatic disease, which can lead to death.Entities:
Keywords: Ciliary epithelium; ciliary body; diktyoma; medulloepithelioma; non-teratoid; teratoid; tumor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31124483 PMCID: PMC6552580 DOI: 10.4103/ijo.IJO_845_19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Ophthalmol ISSN: 0301-4738 Impact factor: 1.848
Classification of epithelial tumors of nonpigmented ciliary body epithelium
| Congenital |
|---|
| Glioneuroma |
| Medulloepithelioma |
| 1. Nonteratoid |
| Benign |
| Malignant |
| 2. Teratoid |
| Benign |
| Malignant |
| Acquired |
| Nonpigmented ciliary epithelium Hyperplasia (Fuchs adenoma) |
| Adenoma |
| Adenocarcinoma |
Adapted from[1] Saunders T, Margo CE. Intraocular medulloepithelioma. Arch Pathol Lab Med. 2012;136:212-6
Figure 1Clinical features of medulloepithelioma in (a) 2-year-old girl who presented with translucent white mass (arrow) with intrinsic vascularity and iris neovascularisation. (b) In the ciliary body was a beige-white mass with loss of zonule, representing medulloepithelioma
Intraocular Medulloepithelioma: Clinical features
| Symptoms |
| Leucocoria (20%) |
| Loss of vision (27%) |
| Painful red eye (20%) |
| Asymptomatic (17%) |
| Strabismus (12%) |
| Signs |
| Grey-white Ciliary body mass with cysts |
| Lens |
| Loss of zonules and Subluxation (27%) |
| Notch or coloboma (20%) |
| Cataract (46%) - Sectoral or Total |
| Iris |
| Localised bowing/bulge |
| Neovascularisation (51%) |
| Corectopia (29%) |
| Ectropion uveae (29%) |
| Retrolental Neoplastic cyclitic membrane (51%) |
| Secondary glaucoma (44%) |
| Neovascular glaucoma (83%) |
| Angle closure glaucoma (17%) |
| Vitreous haemorrhage (5%) |
| Retinal detachment (22%) |
| Extra ocular tumor extension (10%) |
Data adapted from[17] Kaliki S., Shields C.L., Eagle Jr. R.C et al. Ciliary body medulloepithelioma: Analysis of 41 cases. Ophthalmology 2013, 120, pp. 2552-2559
Figure 2Ultrasonography of medulloepithelioma demonstrates (a) B-scan showing a heterogenous echodense mass in ciliary body with intra-tumoral cyst (arrow). (b) Ultrasound biomicroscopy better delineates the solid mass, echodense foci of cartilage, and intra-tumoral cysts (arrow)
Figure 3A 5-year-old girl with (a) leukocoria was noted to have iris neovascularization and retrolental neoplastic cyclitic membrane with vessels (arrow) arising from the ciliary body. (b) Ultrasound biomicroscopy depicted the ciliary body mass with intratumoral cysts, lens subluxation and neoplastic cyclitic membrane (arrow). Fluorescein angiography in the (c) early and (d) late frames highlight the vessels in the retrolental membrane. Following enucleation, the (e) gross specimen reveals an amelanotic ciliary body tumour (arrow) with pigmented areas and with neoplastic cyclitic membrane (arrowhead). Histopathology (f) shows tubules and nests of basophilic neoplastic cells (black arrow) surrounded by loose mucopolysaccharide rich matrix. (Hematoxyline eosin stain; 2.5x magnification)
Intraocular medulloepithelioma: Treatment modalities
| Broughton and Zimmerman[ | Canning | Shields | Kaliki | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Radical | ||||
| Primary Enucleation | 38 (68) | 12 (75) | 4 (40) | 21 (60) |
| Secondary Enucleation | 8 (14) | 4 (25) | 4 (40) | 5 (14) |
| Primary Exenteration | 3 (5) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Secondary Exenteration | 5 (9) | 1 (2) | 1 (10) | 1 (3) |
| Conservative | ||||
| Cryotherapy | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 1 (3) |
| Partial Lamellar sclerouvectomy | 10 (18) | 4 (25) | 6 (60) | 8 (23) |
| Primary Plaque Brachytherapy | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 3 (9) |
| Secondary Plaque brachytherapy | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 2 (20) | 2 (6) |
| External beam Radiotherapy (Adjuvant) | 0 (0) | 2 (12) | 1 (10) | 1 (3) |
| Chemotherapy | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 1 (3) |
Figure 4A 2-year-old boy with (a) fleshy vascularised mass in his right eye, confirmed on fine needle aspiration biopsy to have ciliary body medulloepithelioma with angle involvement. He was treated with 6 cycles of systemic chemotherapy (vincristine, etoposide and carboplatin) followed by plaque brachytherapy and showed stable regression of tumour 6 months post treatment (b)