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The pediatric choroidal and ciliary body melanoma study: A survey by the European Ophthalmic Oncology Group

Authors :
Al Jamal, Rana'A T
Cassoux, Nathalie
Desjardins, Laurence
Damato, Bertil
Konstantinidis, Lazaro
Coupland, Sarah E.
Heimann, Heinrich
Petrovic, Aleksandra
Zografos, Leonida
Schalenbourg, Ann
Velazquez Martin, Juan P.
Krema, Hatem
Bogdali, Anna
Markiewicz, Anna
Romanowska Dixon, Bozena
Metz, Claudia H. D.
Biewald, Eva
Bornfeld, Norbert
Kiratli, Hayyam
Bronkhorst, Inge H. G.
Jager, Martine J.
Marinkovic, Marina
Fili, Maria
Seregard, Stefan
Frenkel, Shahar
Pe'Er, Jacob
Salvi, Sachin M.
Rennie, Ian G.
Rospond Kubiak, Iwona
Kociecki, Jaroslaw
Kiilgaard, Jens Folke
Heegaard, Steffen
Cohen, Victoria M. L.
Sagoo, Mandeep S.
Amiryan, Anush
Saakyan, Svetlana
Eide, Nil
Krohn, Jørgen
Midena, Edoardo
Parrozzani, Raffaele
Grange, Jean Daniel
Kilic, Emine
Blasi, Maria Antonietta
Saornil, Maria Antonia
Kivelä, Tero T.
Blasi, Maria Antonietta (ORCID:0000-0001-7393-7644)
Al Jamal, Rana'A T
Cassoux, Nathalie
Desjardins, Laurence
Damato, Bertil
Konstantinidis, Lazaro
Coupland, Sarah E.
Heimann, Heinrich
Petrovic, Aleksandra
Zografos, Leonida
Schalenbourg, Ann
Velazquez Martin, Juan P.
Krema, Hatem
Bogdali, Anna
Markiewicz, Anna
Romanowska Dixon, Bozena
Metz, Claudia H. D.
Biewald, Eva
Bornfeld, Norbert
Kiratli, Hayyam
Bronkhorst, Inge H. G.
Jager, Martine J.
Marinkovic, Marina
Fili, Maria
Seregard, Stefan
Frenkel, Shahar
Pe'Er, Jacob
Salvi, Sachin M.
Rennie, Ian G.
Rospond Kubiak, Iwona
Kociecki, Jaroslaw
Kiilgaard, Jens Folke
Heegaard, Steffen
Cohen, Victoria M. L.
Sagoo, Mandeep S.
Amiryan, Anush
Saakyan, Svetlana
Eide, Nil
Krohn, Jørgen
Midena, Edoardo
Parrozzani, Raffaele
Grange, Jean Daniel
Kilic, Emine
Blasi, Maria Antonietta
Saornil, Maria Antonia
Kivelä, Tero T.
Blasi, Maria Antonietta (ORCID:0000-0001-7393-7644)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Purpose To collect comprehensive data on choroidal and ciliary body melanoma (CCBM) in children and to validate hypotheses regarding pediatric CCBM: children younger than 18 years, males, and those without ciliary body involvement (CBI) have more favorable survival prognosis than young adults 18 to 24 years of age, females, and those with CBI. Design Retrospective, multicenter observational study. Participants Two hundred ninety-nine patients from 24 ocular oncology centers, of whom 114 were children (median age, 15.1 years; range, 2.7-17.9 years) and 185 were young adults. Methods Data were entered through a secure website and were reviewed centrally. Survival was analyzed using Kaplan-Meier analysis and Cox proportional hazards regression. Main Outcome Measures Proportion of females, tumor-node-metastasis (TNM) stage, cell type, and melanoma-related mortality. Results Cumulative frequency of having CCBM diagnosed increased steadily by 0.8% per year of age between 5 and 10 years of age and, after a 6-year transition period, by 8.8% per year from age 17 years onward. Of children and young adults, 57% and 63% were female, respectively, which exceeded the expected 51% among young adults. Cell type, known for 35% of tumors, and TNM stage (I in 22% and 21%, II in 49% and 52%, III in 30% and 28%, respectively) were comparable for children and young adults. Melanoma-related survival was 97% and 90% at 5 years and 92% and 80% at 10 years for children compared with young adults, respectively (P = 0.013). Males tended to have a more favorable survival than females among children (100% vs. 85% at 10 years; P = 0.058). Increasing TNM stage was associated with poorer survival (stages I, II, and III: 100% vs. 86% vs. 76%, respectively; P = 0.0011). By multivariate analysis, being a young adult (adjusted hazard rate [HR], 2.57), a higher TNM stage (HR, 2.88 and 8.38 for stages II and III, respectively), and female gender (HR, 2.38) independently predicted less favorable survival.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1105029337
Document Type :
Electronic Resource