Title: White pupil
1White pupil
- Brig Amer Yaqub
- MCPS, FCPS, FRCSEd
2Causes of White Pupil
- DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS OF WHITE PUPIL
- Cataract
3Causes of White Pupil
- DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS OF WHITE PUPIL
- Retinoblastoma
4Causes of White Pupil
- DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS OF WHITE PUPIL
- Toxocariasis
5Causes of White Pupil
- DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS OF WHITE PUPIL
- Coats disease
6Causes of White Pupil
- DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS OF WHITE PUPIL
- Retinopathy of Prematurity
7Causes of White Pupil
- DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS OF WHITE PUPIL
- Retinal detachment
8Causes of White Pupil
- DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS OF WHITE PUPIL
- Coloboma
9Causes of White Pupil
- DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS OF WHITE PUPIL
- Retinal dysplasia
10Causes of White Pupil
- DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS OF WHITE PUPIL
- Norries disease
11Retinoblastoma
- Retinoblastoma is the most common intraocular
tumor of childhood, accounting for 1 of
childhood cancer deaths in the United States and
5 of blindness in children - The incidence is 1 in 15,000 to 1 in 20,000 live
births - Overall mortality from retinoblastoma decreased
from 95 a century ago. With modern diagnostic
and therapeutic advances, the mortality rate from
metastatic or recurrent retinoblastoma has been
as low as 5
12Retinoblastoma
- The disease is bilateral in approximately 40 of
cases - The average age at diagnosis is 18 months and 90
of patients are diagnosed before the age of 3
years
13Retinoblastoma
- Less than 10 of retinoblastoma have a family
history of the disorder, 90 of cases are
sporadic - Of the sporadic cases, the responsible mutation
is in a germ cell in 25 of cases and in a
somatic cell in 75 of cases
14GENETICS
- Located chromosome- 13q14Â
- May be heritable or non-heritable
- Retinoblastoma results from malignant
transformation of primitive retinal cells before
final differentiation - As these cells disappear in the first few years
of life, the tumour is seldom seen after 3 years
of age
15GENETICS
- Heritable (germline) accounts for 40 of cases
- One allele of RB1 (a tumour suppressor gene) is
mutated in all body cells - The mutation is transmitted in 50 but because of
incomplete penetrance only 40 of offspring will
be affected - If a child has heritable retinoblastoma, the risk
to siblings is 2 if the parents are healthy, and
40 if a parent is affected - About 15 of patients with hereditary
retinoblastoma manifest unilateral involvement - Non-heritable (somatic) accounts for 60 of cases
- Unilateral, not transmissible and does not
predispose the patient to second non-ocular
cancers
16RETINOBLASTOMA
- CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
- Leukocoria (60)
- Strabismus (20)
- OTHER- Uveitis, Orbital cellulitis, Hyphaema,
Heterochromia, Glaucoma, Buphthalmos
17Presentations of Retinoblastoma
- Anterior segment invasion
18Advanced Endophytic Retinoblastoma
Friable white mass
Cottage cheese appearance
Fine surface blood vessels
Vitreous seedings
19Exophytic Retinoblastoma
May be difficult to visualize through deep
detachment
Multilobulated white mass with overlying retinal
detachment
20Ultrasound
21CT diagnosis of retinoblastoma
Calcification
- Orbital and CNS extension
22Diagnosis
- Biopsies are not usually done to diagnose
retinoblastoma because - It can be recognized with great accuracy just by
examination - A biopsy cannot be done easily without harming
the eye - risks spreading the cancer cells
23Poor Prognostic Factors
- Optic nerve involvement
- Choroidal invasion
- Large tumour
- Anterior location
- Poor cellular differentiation
- Older children
24MANAGEMENT
- Genetic Counselling
- Treatment of small (3 mm diameter) tumours
- Photocoagulation
- Cryotherapy
- Chemotherapy
- Medium sized (upto 12 mm) tumours
- Chemotherapy
- External beam radiation
- Large tumours
- Chemotherapy
- Enucleation
25Treatment
Advantages Disadvantages
Photocoagulation (Laser Therapy) The laser beam focuses on the cancerous tumor, cuts off blood supply to the tumor and shrinks it. Depending on the size of the tumor, chemotherapy may be needed for larger tumors that cannot be shrunk just by laser.
Cryotherapy (Freezing Treatment) The tumor is frozen and thawed several times by a cold gas and this causes the tumor to shrink. The tumor will leave a pigmented scar and the eye lid will swell for a couple of days.
Chemotherapy After the extensive cycles of chemo, the cancer cells are reduced, thereby, shrinking of the tumor. There are several cycles, and there is an IV port necessary to draw blood, and inject the drugs.
Enucleation This is removal of the eyeball and the tumor is extracted when no other option is possible due to the size of the tumor. The whole eyeball is removed with the attendant problems of anophthalmic socket.
26Treatment
- Extraocular extension
- Chemotherapy
- Radiotherapy
- Metastatic Disease
- High dose chemotherapy
- Intra-thecal chemotherapy
- Total body radiotherapy
27Follow-up
- Heritable Retinoblastoma patients can develop
recurrences and need to be followed up regularly - Examine the patients every 6 months till the age
of 5 years and then annually till the age of 10
years.