
Retinoblastoma: Ten Years Experience at Kanti Children's Hospital
Author(s) -
Kailash Prasad Sah,
Rohit Saiju,
Pankaj Roy,
Sonali Kafle
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of nepal medical association
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.176
H-Index - 19
eISSN - 1815-672X
pISSN - 0028-2715
DOI - 10.31729/jnma.2429
Subject(s) - medicine , phthisis bulbi , retinoblastoma , strabismus , pediatrics , surgery , presentation (obstetrics) , incidence (geometry) , pathological , visual acuity , biochemistry , chemistry , physics , optics , gene
Retinoblastoma is a malignant tumor of the embryonic neural retina. It is the most common intraocular tumor of childhood. It is a disease of early childhood with 80% cases diagnosed before the age of 4 years. The median age at diagnosis is 2 years. Bilateral cases are diagnosed earlier (median at 12 months and unilateral median age at 24 months). The incidence of retinoblastoma is approximately 1 in 15000-18000 live births in developed countries. The aim of the research is to study the clinical pathological features, treatment and survival of children with retinoblastoma over ten years.
Methods: A retrospective hospital based study was conducted from March 1998 to February 2008. Gender, age, clinical presentation, pathology reports, treatment, follow –up and outcome were recorded at time of diagnosis.
Results: A total of 42 children with retinoblastoma (85.7 % unilateral, 14.3% bilateral), with 50% having optic nerve involvement were studied. The most common presenting signs were extraoccular (28.6%), proptosis (23.8%), leukoria (23.8%), phthisis bulbi (16.7%), and strabismus (7.1%). The age at presentation ranged from 6-120 months with mean age of 46.6 months. The male to female ratio was 1.1:1.Two-thirds presented between 2-5 yrs, followed by 12-24 months (23.8%). Majority of children had poorly differentiated retinoblastoma (62 %), followed by well differentiated (28.6%), and moderately differentiated (9.5%). CEV based protocol used to treat, and over-all 10 yrs survival was 23.8 %, death 19 %, and lost to follow-up or left against medical advice 57.2%.
Conclusions: Despite severe resource limitation, pediatric oncology unit has been successfully treating retinoblastoma with the success rate of 23.8%.
Keywords: chemotherapy; outcome; remission; retinoblastoma.