Basics & Genes - Eye Spy a Bad Gene
- Most common childhood intraocular malignancy.
⭐ Retinoblastoma is the most common intraocular malignancy in childhood, typically diagnosed before 5 years of age.
- Genetics: RB1 gene (Chr 13q14) mutation; tumor suppressor.
- Knudson's "two-hit" hypothesis.
- Forms:
- Hereditary (40%): Germline RB1 mutation. Often bilateral, multiple foci. ↑ risk of secondary cancers (osteosarcoma, pineoblastoma).
- Sporadic (60%): Somatic RB1 mutations. Usually unilateral, unifocal.
Signs & Scans - The White Reflex
- Clinical Presentation:
- Leukocoria (Cat's Eye Reflex): Most common sign. White pupil, often noted in photos.
⭐ Leukocoria (white pupillary reflex) is the most common presenting sign of retinoblastoma, followed by strabismus.
- Strabismus: Second most common, due to vision loss.
- Others: Proptosis, hyphema, red/painful eye, ↓vision.
- Leukocoria (Cat's Eye Reflex): Most common sign. White pupil, often noted in photos.
- Imaging & Diagnosis:
- Indirect Ophthalmoscopy: Reveals chalky-white retinal mass ± calcification.
- USG B-scan (Eye): Detects mass & pathognomonic calcification; differentiates mimics.

- MRI (Orbit & Brain): Assesses optic nerve/extraocular spread, pineal gland (trilateral RB). Avoid CT (radiation).
Staging & Outlook - Grading the Threat
- Intraocular Staging (Key):
- IIRC (Groups A-E): Current standard, predicts salvage.
- ICRB: Older classification.
- Extraocular/Metastatic:
- AJCC TNM (8th ed.).
- IRSS: For orbital/metastatic disease.
- High-Risk Factors (↑ recurrence/metastasis):
- Optic nerve invasion (post-laminar critical).
- Massive choroidal invasion (>3mm).
- Anterior segment involvement.
- Scleral/Orbital extension.
⭐ The International Intraocular Retinoblastoma Classification (IIRC) groups eyes from A (very low risk) to E (very high risk of treatment failure with conservative measures).
- Prognosis:
- Intraocular disease: Excellent survival (>95%).
- Metastatic disease: Poor.
Treatment Tactics - Saving Sight & Life
Treatment aims to save life and preserve vision, tailored to disease stage.
- Primary Goal: Globe salvage & vision preservation if possible; life-saving paramount.
- Chemoreduction (Systemic): VEC (Vincristine, Etoposide, Carboplatin) often initial for bulky intraocular tumors (Groups C, D, E).
- Focal Therapies (Consolidation/Primary for small tumors - Groups A, B):
- Laser photocoagulation (Transpupillary Thermotherapy - TTT)
- Cryotherapy
- Targeted Chemotherapy:
- Intra-arterial Chemotherapy (IAC): e.g., Melphalan, for localized disease, reducing systemic toxicity.
- Intravitreal Chemotherapy: For vitreous seeds.
- Enucleation: For advanced disease (e.g., Group E with no visual potential, neovascular glaucoma, optic nerve invasion).
- External Beam Radiotherapy (EBRT): Reserved for orbital extension or salvage; high risk of secondary malignancies.
⭐ Trilateral retinoblastoma refers to bilateral hereditary retinoblastoma associated with a pinealoblastoma or other primitive neuroectodermal tumor (PNET) in the suprasellar or parasellar region.

Aftermath & Alerts - Beyond the Eye
- Long-term Follow-up: Lifelong.
- Ophthalmic exams: initially every 2-4 months, then spaced.
- Brain/orbit MRI: every 6-12 months for 3-5 years (pineoblastoma surveillance).
- Secondary Malignancies (SMN):
⭐ Patients with germline RB1 mutations have a significantly increased lifetime risk of developing secondary malignancies, most commonly osteosarcomas, soft tissue sarcomas, and melanomas.
- Annual whole-body MRI for hereditary cases.
- Treatment Complications:
- Hearing loss (carboplatin).
- Cosmetic: orbital implant/prosthesis post-enucleation.
- Radiation effects: cataracts, retinopathy, orbital hypoplasia.
- Chemotherapy: renal toxicity, growth impairment.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Most common intraocular malignancy in childhood; from retinal neuroblasts.
- RB1 gene mutation (chromosome 13q14, tumor suppressor).
- Leukocoria ("cat's eye reflex") is most common sign; strabismus second.
- Flexner-Wintersteiner rosettes (pathognomonic); calcification on imaging.
- Hereditary form (40%): often bilateral, multifocal; risk of trilateral retinoblastoma.
- ↑ Risk of secondary cancers (e.g., osteosarcoma), especially post-radiotherapy.
- Treatment: Enucleation (large tumors); chemotherapy, focal therapies (smaller tumors).
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