Follow-up of Cystic Pineal Glands in Retinoblastoma Patients Does Not Increase Detection of Pineal Trilateral Retinoblastoma
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_97A4D8A0E526
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Follow-up of Cystic Pineal Glands in Retinoblastoma Patients Does Not Increase Detection of Pineal Trilateral Retinoblastoma
Journal
American Journal of Ophthalmology
ISSN
0002-9394
ISSN-L
0002-9394
Publication state
Published
Issued date
12/2024
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
268
Pages
199-211
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: aheadofprint
Publication Status: aheadofprint
Abstract
To evaluate the effectiveness of baseline screening and follow-up with MRI to detecting trilateral retinoblastoma (TRb) and assessing the risk of TRb development.
Prospective multicenter cohort study METHODS: A total of 607 retinoblastoma patients from 2012 through 2022 were included and followed up until 1-9-2023. At each center a neuroradiologist categorized pineal glands on baseline and follow-up scans into four groups: (A) normal, (B) cystic gland, (C) suspicious gland, or (D) TRb. Different follow-up schedules were assigned to each category. Categories (B) and (C) were followed-up with MRI after approximately 3-months and after another 3 months if suspicion remained. On each MRI, they measured the height and width, evaluated the aspect (solid, partly cystic and completely cystic) of the pineal gland and evaluated radiological features suspicious of pineal TRb. The effectiveness of the current TRb screening method was assessed by evaluating its sensitivity and specificity to detect TRb. Determining the TRb incidence was a secondary outcome measure.
Heritable retinoblastoma patients had a risk of 3.78% to develop TRb. One out of four pineal TRbs was detected during a follow-up scan and four out of five non-pineal TRbs were detected on the baseline MRI. Screening for pineal TRb had a sensitivity of 25% and specificity of 100%, for non-pineal TRb the sensitivity was 80%. It required 494 follow-up scans to detect one pineal TRb. However, when restricting the follow-up to solely suspicious glands, only 22 scans were required to detect one pineal TRb.
During extended follow-up after baseline MRI, only one pineal trilateral retinoblastoma was detected in our study. Follow-up after three months should be restricted to patients with a suspicious pineal gland defined as irregularly thickening of the cyst wall (>2mm), fine nodular aspect of the cyst wall or when a solid or cystic gland exceeds the upper 99% prediction interval for size; patients with an unsuspicious cystic gland should not be followed up. Baseline MRI screening was able to detect most non-pineal trilateral retinoblastomas.
Prospective multicenter cohort study METHODS: A total of 607 retinoblastoma patients from 2012 through 2022 were included and followed up until 1-9-2023. At each center a neuroradiologist categorized pineal glands on baseline and follow-up scans into four groups: (A) normal, (B) cystic gland, (C) suspicious gland, or (D) TRb. Different follow-up schedules were assigned to each category. Categories (B) and (C) were followed-up with MRI after approximately 3-months and after another 3 months if suspicion remained. On each MRI, they measured the height and width, evaluated the aspect (solid, partly cystic and completely cystic) of the pineal gland and evaluated radiological features suspicious of pineal TRb. The effectiveness of the current TRb screening method was assessed by evaluating its sensitivity and specificity to detect TRb. Determining the TRb incidence was a secondary outcome measure.
Heritable retinoblastoma patients had a risk of 3.78% to develop TRb. One out of four pineal TRbs was detected during a follow-up scan and four out of five non-pineal TRbs were detected on the baseline MRI. Screening for pineal TRb had a sensitivity of 25% and specificity of 100%, for non-pineal TRb the sensitivity was 80%. It required 494 follow-up scans to detect one pineal TRb. However, when restricting the follow-up to solely suspicious glands, only 22 scans were required to detect one pineal TRb.
During extended follow-up after baseline MRI, only one pineal trilateral retinoblastoma was detected in our study. Follow-up after three months should be restricted to patients with a suspicious pineal gland defined as irregularly thickening of the cyst wall (>2mm), fine nodular aspect of the cyst wall or when a solid or cystic gland exceeds the upper 99% prediction interval for size; patients with an unsuspicious cystic gland should not be followed up. Baseline MRI screening was able to detect most non-pineal trilateral retinoblastomas.
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
19/07/2024 7:45
Last modification date
28/10/2024 7:18