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Uvea Melanomlarının Tedavisinde Brakiterapi
Author(s) -
Samuray Tuncer
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
turkish journal of ophthalmology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.654
H-Index - 10
eISSN - 2147-2661
pISSN - 1300-0659
DOI - 10.4274/tjo.87487
Subject(s) - uvea , ophthalmology , medicine , optometry , eye disease
Uveal melanoma is the most common intraocular tumor in adults. Clinical studies have shown similar patient survival rates after\udtreatment of medium-sized melanomas when comparing plaque brachytherapy with radioactive iodine-125 versus enucleation. This\udfinding further emphasizes the importance of this globe-sparing treatment. Brachytherapy is a special local radiotherapy technique that\udaims to deliver high-dose radiation directly to the tumor by sparing the periocular structures. Brachytherapy is still the most widely\udused treatment for uveal melanoma. Iodine-125 and ruthenium-106 are the most common radioisotopes used in brachytherapy. After\udbrachytherapy, sight-threatening complications occur unavoidably in many patients. Brachytherapy is mostly associated with long-term\udcomplications. Radiation retinopathy and cataract formation are the most common treatment-related complications. Brachytherapy\udprovides local tumor control (ocular salvage) in about 90% of patients. Adjunctive transpupillary thermotherapy (sandwich therapy)\udimproves the control rate of local tumors to 97%. About 10% of patients treated with brachytherapy subsequently require enucleation\udbecause of local tumor recurrence or neovascular glaucoma at 5 years of follow-up. Metastatic disease occurs in 10% of patients with\udmedium-sized melanoma at 5-year follow-up. This rate increases to 55% at 10-year follow-up in patients with large melanomas (thickness\ud>8 mm). Thus, it is very important to inform the patients under the light of these data prior to brachytherapy. (Turk J Ophthalmol\ud2014; 44: Supplement 43-8

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