Lymphoproliferative disease of the ocular adnexa: A clinical and pathologic study with statistical analysis of 69 patients


Autoria(s): Sullivan, T. J.; Whitehead, K.; Williamson, R.; Grimes, D.; Schlect, D.; Brown, I.; Dickie, G.
Contribuinte(s)

G. J. Harris

Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

Purpose: To evaluate the clinical features, treatment, and outcomes of a cohort of patients with ocular adnexal lymphoproliferative disease classified according to the World Health Organization modification of the Revised European-American Classification of Lymphoid neoplasms and to perform a robust statistical analysis of these data. Methods: Sixty-nine cases of ocular adnexal lymphoproliferative disease, seen in a tertiary referral center from 1992 to 2003, were included in the study. Lesions were classified by using the World Health Organization modification of the Revised European-American Classification of Lymphoid neoplasms classification. Outcome variables included disease-specific Survival, relapse-free survival, local control, and distant control. Results: Stage IV disease at presentation, aggressive lymphoma histology, the presence of prior or concurrent systemic lymphoma at presentation, and bilateral adnexal disease were significant predictors for reduced disease-specific survival, local control, and distant control. Multivariate analysis found that aggressive histology and bilateral adnexal disease had significantly reduced disease-specific Survival. Conclusions: The typical presentation of adnexal lymphoproliferative disease is with a painless mass, swelling, or proptosis; however, pain and inflammation occurred in 20% and 30% of patients, respectively. Stage at presentation, tumor histology, primary or secondary status, and whether the process was unilateral or bilateral were significant variables for disease outcome. In this study, distant spread of lymphoma was lower in patients who received greater than 20 Gy of orbital radiotherapy.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:75893

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

Palavras-Chave #Ophthalmology #Surgery #T-cell Lymphoma #Primary Orbital Lymphoma #Non-hodgkins-lymphomas #Reed-sternberg Cells #Conjunctival Lymphoma #Tissue Lymphoma #B-cells #Extranodal Lymphomas #Working Formulation #Real Classification #C1 #321016 Opthalmology and Vision Science #730111 Hearing, vision, speech and their disorders
Tipo

Journal Article