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The combined use of surgical debulking and diode laser photocoagulation for limbal melanoma treatment: a retrospective study of 21 dogs
Author(s) -
Andreani Valentina,
Guandalini Adolfo,
D'Anunzio,
Giudice Chiara,
Corvi Roberta,
Di Girolamo Nicola,
Sapienza John S.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
veterinary ophthalmology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.594
H-Index - 50
eISSN - 1463-5224
pISSN - 1463-5216
DOI - 10.1111/vop.12383
Subject(s) - medicine , debulking , retrospective cohort study , surgery , medical record , ophthalmology , cancer , ovarian cancer
Objective To evaluate effectiveness and safety of debulking and diode laser photocoagulation (DPC) for the treatment of limbal melanoma (LM). Procedure Retrospective multi‐institutional case series. Medical records of animals diagnosed with LM at the Centro Veterinario Specialistico (CVS) and at the Long Island Veterinary Specialists from 1994 to 2014 were retrieved. Signalment, location, extent of tumors, recurrence rate, and early and late complications were reported. Patient follow‐up information was obtained from veterinary ophthalmologists, primary care veterinarians, and where appropriate, owners. Results Twenty‐one eyes of 21 dogs (13 females and 8 males) were included in this study. The dogs' average age was 6 years (range: 7 months–11 years). The follow‐up period ranged from 1–108 months (median 48 months) after the last DPC procedure. Long‐term follow‐up was obtained by telephone interviews in 6 of 20 cases and by clinical re‐evaluations in 14 of 20 cases. The most common early complications were a moderate anterior uveitis and peripheral corneal edema (21/21 eyes). Late complications included corneal fibrosis and/or pigmentation (20/21). In one case, a severe bullous keratopathy associated with extensive corneal fibrosis was observed (1/21). One case was blind due to concurrent Sudden Acquired Retinal Degeneration (SARD). However, after surgery 2 of 20 eyes lost vision and one of these was enucleated. Conclusions Debulking, in addition to diode laser photocoagulation, was technically straightforward to perform, minimally invasive, well tolerated, and highly successful in this case series.