ABSTRACT
Local therapies replaced systemic chemotherapy for ocular preservation in retinoblastoma. In middle income countries, these techniques pose specific challenges mostly related to more advanced disease at diagnosis. The Grupo de America Latina de Oncologia Pediatrica (GALOP developed a consensus document for the management of conservative therapy for retinoblastoma. Intra-arterial chemotherapy (OAC) is the preferred therapy, except those with less advanced disease or age younger than 6 months. OAC allowed for the elimination of the use of external beam radiotherapy in our setting. Intravitreal chemotherapy is the preferred treatment for vitreous seeding. Enucleation is the treatment of choice for advanced eyes.
BACKGROUND
Since the mid-1990s, conservative treatment of retinoblastoma includes tumor chemoreduction with systemic chemotherapy using Carboplatin, Etoposide and Vincristine followed by focal therapies1,2. In our setting, this resulted in an increase rate of ocular preservation while reducing the use of external radiotherapy (EBRT), albeit at the cost of a higher use of resources3,4 since this treatment is associated with hospitalizations due to chemotherapy complications such as transfusions, neutropenic fever and long-term effects such as ototoxicity as well as chemotherapy-induced acute leukemia5-7. In Latin America, up to one third of the patients present with advanced bilateral retinoblastoma, so avoidance of EBRT could be achieved in less than a third of the patients4. The results of this treatment in eyes with vitreous or subretinal seeding were modest, therefore, several major institutions in high income countries implemented ocular chemotherapy techniques such as intra-arterial (OAC) and intra-vitreal chemotherapy in order to allow greater delivery of chemotherapy to the eye with fewer systemic effects8. As opposed to other pediatric malignancies, these outstanding results were not achieved by international cooperative groups performing prospective studies. Therefore, most referral centers for retinoblastoma in South America also moved from systemic to ocular delivery of chemotherapy for the conservative treatment resulting in unprecedented ocular salvage rates and near total elimination of EBRT9-11. This document is the result of a consensus of the current management in institutions participating in the GALOP group, which included collaborating institutions in Spain and Portugal.
INTRA-ARTERIAL CHEMOTHERAPY
In 2008, Abramson and Gobin et al optimized the technique for OAC by directly catheterizing the ophthalmic artery, achieving a so-called ”superselective” administration, since the ophthalmic artery was directly accessed allowing for the use of low absolute doses of chemotherapy12. The best results were seen in patients with extensive retinal detachment and cases with massive intra-retinal tumors and subretinal seeding13,14. No major complications due to the procedure were observed, and only mild adverse events were seen13. In Latin America, OAC was first introduced by the Argentinian group after training in New York in 2009 as a result of a long-term collaboration10,15. However, as opposed to the North American experience, in Argentina (and later in other Latin American countries), OAC was mostly used for the treatment of relapsed or advanced bilateral disease and less frequently for patients with unilateral disease9,10. Later, this treatment was gradually introduced in other countries included in this consensus document9,11,16.
However, there are still unanswered questions about the use of OAC for retinoblastoma. Current treatments are basically empirical in terms of dose and frequency of treatment. The most widely used drug has been Melphalan, but its use is based on incompletely reported in vitrochemosensitivity studies carried out several years ago in Japan17. The New York and Argentinian groups, among others, have also used Topotecan and Carboplatin with good results in terms of efficacy and toxicity10,13. The pharmacokinetic profile of this combination, described by members of this group, was useful to determine the systemic exposure to drugs and with it, its relationship with toxicity and efficacy, allowing a rational design of the therapeutic scheme of administration of OAC18,19. Although many groups use Melphalan as a single agent in this indication, drug combinations tend to be more active in avoiding resistance mechanisms and also useful to reduce toxicity of chemotherapeutic drugs by distributing the different toxicities of various drugs in order to reduce their accumulated doses.
Although the technique is called superselective, predictably, plasma chemotherapy levels are found in patients treated with this modality, being higher in patients receiving treatment in both eyes correlating with myelotoxicity if the dose is greater than 0.48 mg/kg18. Topotecan is an attractive agent for OAC because of its greater vitreous penetration compared to Melphalan20. However, no convincing response was seen when used as single agent for OAC21. Additionally, in vitro cytotoxicity studies of Topotecan and Melphalan showed that both drugs are synergistic in their activity in human retinoblastoma cell lines19. The New York group pioneered the use of carboplatin by this route22. Carboplatin has been extensively studied in retinoblastoma, whose activity has been proven from the clinic to animal models23,24. No significant toxicity associated to Carboplatin given intra-arterially were reported and in the series from Argentina no differences were observed in terms of ocular preservation in eyes treated with Carboplatin (+/- Topotecan) compared to Melphalan10,22. For all these reasons, this consensus proposes a first-line chemotherapy scheme including combinations of the 3 active drugs, Melphalan, Topotecan, and Carboplatin, especially when used as a tandem treatment or for advanced cases.
THE OAC PROCEDURE
It is essential that OAC should be performed by an experienced interventional radiologist or neuro-surgeon, preferably in a center with high patient numbers. The procedure is performed under general anesthesia in the angiography room, with the patient in the supine position. Chemotherapy must be prepared at the oncology pharmacy at the time of administration or, in special circumstances, directly in the angiography suite. Ideally, chemotherapy is requested to the pharmacy as the patient enters the angiography suite so that it is ready for administration at the time of the procedure. After complete disinfection of the groin region, the right or left common femoral artery is punctured. Ultrasound guidance for access may be used in difficult cases, small infants, or according to institutional policies. Following local anesthesia, a 3-French pediatric arterial sheath is placed into the arterial lumen using the Seldinger technique. It is then guided into the internal carotid artery over a 0.008 inch microguide or Sychro 0.010 microguide under fluoroscopic guidance in conjunction with a flow microcatheter (Magic) or microguide-guided microcatheters such as the Marathon microcatheter. In patients older than 4 years, a 4 French Pediatric introducer and a 4 French guide catheter are used. The microcatheters in this group are passed through the 4 French guiding catheter.
Systemic heparinization should be performed intravenously, with an initial heparin bolus of 20 IU/kg. In addition, an intra-arterial catheter drip perfusion (heparinated NaCl solution; 60-70 IU heparin/kg patient weight) is established for the duration of the procedure as a preventive measure against secondary thromboembolism that may be caused by continued presence of the intracarotid catheter.
A flow-guided coaxial microcatheter, 1.2 or 1.5 French (diameter 0.4 and 0.5 mm respectively), is mounted on a 0.007” or 0.014” guide needle, which is directed to the ostium of the ophthalmic artery but not into the artery itself After fluoroscopic confirmation of the correct position of the microcatheter tip as evidenced by a correct choroidal blush, chemotherapy is infused. If an optimal choroidal blush is not obtained or the ophthalmic artery cannot be accessed, it is mandatory to explore an alternative route without further delay, such as use of a micro balloon catheter in the internal carotid artery or catheterization of the external carotid artery (infusing the middle meningeal artery)25.
The total volume of the drugs to be infused must be 30 ml of 0.9% NaCl, dividing the volumes into 15 ml for the administration of each of the drugs (or 10 ml when the three drugs are used in the same eye). The total duration of the infusion is between 20 and 30 minutes, always using a pulsatile technique to allow the drug to get to the inside wall of the artery since laminar flow would not allow to reach the arterial branches if the drugs are simply infused continuously. The microcatheter must be flushed between the 2 chemotherapy injections. Prior to chemotherapy infusion, anti-emetic treatment with ondansetron should be administered intravenously and some groups add vasoconstrictive drops and sprays to the forehead and into the nose respectively in order to shut off blood supply to the nose and supratrochlear artery.
When the infusion is complete, all catheters and the arterial introducer are removed. Hemostasis is achieved by initial manual compression of the femoral artery for 10 minutes, followed by a pressure bandage held in place for 4 hours. Once extubated, the patient is awakened in the angiography recovery room and then transferred to a day hospital or a post-surgical recovery room according to institutional practice, and subsequently discharged from the hospital after 4-8 hours if no complications occur.
The use of systemic corticosteroids (dexamethasone 0.15 mg/kg) in order to prevent orbital edema is routinely considered in cases when the three drugs are administered in the same eye or when erythema is confirmed at the end of the procedure or orbital edema, especially when an external carotid artery approach has been used. Depending on institutional practice, some groups routinely use corticosteroids eye drops. The use of modern equipment and limited exposure times are essential, in order to deliver a minimum dose of radiation26.
DRUGS AND DOSAGES FOR OAC
The combination of Melphalan and Topotecan was the preferred initial regimen in this consortium for mono-ocular treatments. Carboplatin may be used in case of lack of availability of Melphalan. If both eyes should be treated, our group recommends tandem OAC (i.e. sequential chemotherapy administration to both eyes in the same procedure)27. For bilateral Group D eyes, we agreed to use upfront tandem OAC27. In these cases, the chemotherapy combination is decided individually for each patient using the doses indicated in Table 1, but deciding upon the tumor response and tolerance. The most common practice is to give Melphalan-Topotecan to one eye and Carboplatin-Topotecan to the contralateral eye (Table 2). It is possible to alternate this combination in each eye when response is asymmetrical or toxicity occurs. We discourage the routine use of bilateral injections of Melphalan either at full doses or in reduced doses, preferring the use of the 3-drug combination. Factors such as vascular anatomy play an important role in the efficacy of this treatment25. In certain circumstances, doses may vary, increasing them in cases of insufficient response and good tolerance or decreasing them in cases where tolerance is not adequate. Therefore, the dose decision is taken jointly by the treating medical team, considering the activity and toxicity presented in previous cycles, and it may be adjusted according to clinical criteria or need for treatment in both eyes. The number of cycles will depend on the response, being generally less than 4-6. Our group discourages prolonged attempts to conserve eyes with additional cycles of OAC in order to avoid increasing the risk of metastatic relapse8.
INTRAVITREAL CHEMOTHERAPY
The technique for intravitreal injection is adapted from Munier et al28. Ultra-biomicroscopy (UBM), if available, is recommended in order to more accurately characterize the injection site. In most cases, the quadrant for injection can be easily identified with ophthalmologic examination, so the use of UBM would not be mandatory every time. However, in eyes with extensive vitreous seeding, especially when there is no response to chemotherapy, the use of UBM is preferred. Ultrasound examination is also recommended to assess the status of the hyaloid in order to avoid a subsequent injection behind it in case it had become detached. In all cases, a tumor-free quadrant of the retina is preferred in order to administer the drug safely. Paracentesis of the anterior chamber, taking up to 0.1 ml of aqueous humor is done at the beginning of the procedure by most groups. We prefer a fine needle, 32-34 G, although in some centers only 30 G needles are available as a smallest size. Since there are no randomized studies comparing the drug efficacy, we propose to use Topotecan (30 micrograms in 0.15 ml of saline) as initial treatment, based on its more favorable toxicity profile, especially in single eyes or those with good vision, reserving Melphalan (20 or 30 micrograms in 0.10-0.15 ml) for cases of incomplete response or relapse29,30. Both drugs can be previously prepared and stored in a freezer at -20C (with adequate temperature monitoring) since their stability has been reported31,32. Intravitreal injection is performed using a microscope, injecting the drug through the pars plana in the quadrant opposite the tumor lesion. Cryocoagulation is applied to the puncture tract to minimize the risk of seeding along the tract. Some groups additionally recommend shaking the eyeball and washing it with abundant distilled water to further minimize the risk of contamination, although reports and experimental studies show that it is a rare phenomenon33,34. There is controversy regarding the frequency of intravitreal chemotherapy applications from weekly injections to injections every 3-4 weeks. For this consensus, it was not given preference to any schedule, however, most participants agreed that in cases of massive vitreous seeding, especially in the form of a cloud, weekly application (at least in the first doses) might be advisable closely observing response and toxicity. It is recommended that the number of applications be a minimum of 2 for seeding in the form of dust, 3 for the form of spheres and 4 for the form of clouds, up to a (theoretical) maximum of 8 applications. It is also possible to apply an ”induction” on a weekly basis and after observing a response, ”consolidate” with 1 or 2 additional applications at 3 or 4 weeks. It is preferable that the tumor is initially treated with OAC before intravitreal chemotherapy is administered. The results of intravitreal chemotherapy after systemic chemotherapy are not known.
SYSTEMIC CHEMOTHERAPY FOR LESS ADVANCED INTRAOCULAR TUMORS
Systemic chemotherapy for group B or C eyes is considered by most groups as standard treatment which may avoid the potential for ocular toxicity of OAC with a comparable success rate35. OAC may be used for relapse or incomplete response. However, patients with group B-C eyes with macular involvement benefit from the treatment with OAC36. In patients with unilateral group B-C retinoblastoma, we propose the indistinct use of systemic or OAC according to the experience of each group and local availability (favoring the use of OAC when available) in patients older than 6 months of age or over 6 kilos based on reports of shorter treatments and lower toxicity37.
Although a study showed that two drugs (Vincristine and Carboplatin) are inferior to combinations with three drugs in the conservative treatment of retinoblastoma, our group decided to use the two-drug combination, without the use of Etoposide for patients receiving systemic chemoreduction38. The group agreed that the use of Etoposide is not justified in centers that have OAC since it has been associated with higher risk of secondary leukemias, even at doses considered safe in other neoplasms39.
In patients with bilateral disease presenting with one eye group B or C and the contralateral eye group D (the most common presentation in our continent), the use of tandem OAC is also preferred as this would provide better chances of success in the treatment of the D eye. In cases of limited access to OAC or in groups with less experience in the use of tandem therapy, the use of systemic chemotherapy followed by OAC (+/- intravitreous chemotherapy) only for consolidation of the D eye may be an alternative.
MANAGEMENT OF PATIENTS WITH GROUP D SPORADIC UNILATERAL RETINOBLASTOMA
Considering the need for high utilization of resources and limited functional outcomes in unilateral eyes treated conservatively, we agreed that initial enucleation of most patients with sporadic unilateral disease with group D and all group E eyes is the standard treatment40. However, group D eyes includes many clinical situations from eyes with advanced disease with multiple vitreous seeding and low probability of useful vision, to eyes with smaller tumors, occasionally sparing the macula and presenting vitreous and/or subretinal seeding, in whom conservative treatment may preserve vision. Affected families may prefer conservative therapy and OAC should be offered when there is a reasonable chance of vision preservation41. It is important to consider that in our setting, it is seldom possible to have timely results of the presence of the germinal mutation of the RB1 gene so it can be considered in the initial therapeutic decision. Also, of note, we use the international classification of intraocular retinoblastoma in its original Murphree version42. Other groups use the Philadelphia modification where involvement of more than 2/3 of the retina is considered group E, rather to group D as in the Murphree classification43. No case with group E disease, according to the Murphree classification, will it be treated with conservative treatment in our setting.
MANAGEMENT OF PATIENTS UNDER 6 MONTHS OR 6 KILOS
In general, children under 6 months are not candidates for OAC, although this treatment may be possible in patients weighing more than 5 kg. Each situation will be assessed individually and in those that are considered to be ineligible to receive this treatment, a limited number of cycles of “bridge” systemic chemoreduction with single agent carboplatin (in a dose adapted to the age and gestational age) may be indicated until their weight makes them candidates for receiving OAC44.
A summary of the treatment recommendations is presented in Table 3.
MANAGEMENT OF PATIENTS WITH BILATERAL RETINOBLASTOMA AND RISK FACTORS IN THE ENUCLEATED EYE
In patients with bilateral retinoblastoma and one eye of group E, in whom initial enucleation is indicated and conservative treatment with OAC of the contralateral eye is considered, the result of the pathology of the other eye should be awaited to indicate definitive treatment. In the event of pathology risk factors, systemic chemotherapy will be indicated according to current recommendations or protocols in the GALOP group40. In case one or both eyes present with severe buphthalmos, we recommend neo-adjuvant systemic chemotherapy followed by secondary enucleation and systemic adjuvant therapy regardless of the HRPF45. If there is still active intraocular disease in the remaining eye, OAC may be used for secondary treatment.
CRITIQUE TO SELECTIVE OCULAR TREATMENTS
Lack of the “protective effect of systemic chemotherapy”
Retinoblastoma offers a period of “metastatic grace” when it is possible to give eye-conservative therapy with a low probability of metastatic dissemination8. The risk of metastatic relapse is restricted to patients with advanced intra-ocular disease who are usually not considered as candidates for eye salvage therapies and show pathologic risk factors. Recent studies suggest that retinoblastoma’s biological subtypes may have different risk of metastasis and also patients with higher risk of metastasis show higher levels of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) at the moment of enucleation46,47. Hence, as OAC became more widely used for conservative therapy, some authors gave a word of caution for the putative loss of the “protective effect” of systemic chemotherapy to prevent metastatic dissemination48. Systemic chemotherapy is effective for the prevention of metastatic relapse in enucleated patients who present high risk pathology features, but this protective effect would not be needed in patients treated conservatively when adequately selected, because their risk of metastatic dissemination is minimal40. In fact, there are now more than 200 peer-reviewed papers in the past 15 years on survival after OAC and all reported a very low (<1%) risk of metastases in patients receiving this treatment, despite a low chemotherapy exposure in the systemic compartment49. In addition, OAC attains very high levels of chemotherapy to the optic nerve and choroid, giving enhanced “protection” to major sites of fatal retinoblastoma dissemination50. In fact, CNS relapse after OAC has been rarely reported and the few cases showing metastatic dissemination after OAC had systemic or orbital dissemination or in some cases, in middle income countries failed to comply with therapy49. The recognition that higher risk pathologic features exist before treatment and that enucleation does not prevent metastases in these eyes (as evidenced by the development of metastasis following enucleation) has spurred the use of eye and vision saving techniques even in eyes with some higher risk features in high income countries. 51 Our ability for non-invasively identifying patients at higher risk for developing metastatic disease or those with MYCN amplified tumors who are not candidates for eye salvaging is improving. Liquid biopsy studies reveal that patients who subsequently developed metastatic relapse had higher levels of ctDNA47. In these patients, ctDNA levels could be an indicator of higher tumor burden, and if ctDNA fails to disappear after enucleation it would show impending extraocular relapse in unilateral cases and in bilateral patients with controlled tumors. It may be possible that traditional treatment with initial enucleation in group E eyes may be challenged with these observations so that what was considered high risk pathologic features as prognostic indicators of risk of extraocular relapse would move to a more personalized management based on actual minimal dissemination to guide therapeutic decisions. This is also relevant for eyes that have received a high number of conservative treatments either local or systemic over a long period of time. In these patients, the “state of metastatic grace” may be lost and metastatic disease may develop.
Lack of protection for trilateral disease
Early results with the use of systemic chemotherapy suggested a possible effect in reducing the risk of trilateral disease in patients with germline RB1 mutation52. However, they were based on a small number of cases and later studies failed to confirm this observation4. Subsequent studies revealed that the overall prevalence of trilateral retinoblastoma is lower after new and better designed studies were done and studies using OAC did not report an increased prevalence of trilateral retinoblastoma and the avoidance of EBRT by the use of OAC would further reduce its prevalence53.
ACKNOWLDGEMENT: The authors acknowledge the support and teachings of Dr David H Abramson during the production of this consensus. This work was supported in part by the Fund for Ophthalmic Knowledge, New York, NY, USA
REFERENCES
1. Kingston JE, Hungerford JL, Madreperla SA, Plowman PN. Results of combined chemotherapy and radiotherapy for advanced intraocular retinoblastoma. Arch Ophthalmol 1996;114:1339-43.
2. Friedman DL, Himelstein B, Shields CL, et al. Chemoreduction and local ophthalmic therapy for intraocular retinoblastoma. J Clin Oncol 2000;18:12-7.
3. Antoneli CB, Ribeiro KC, Steinhorst F, Novaes PE, Chojniak MM, Malogolowkin M. Treatment of retinoblastoma patients with chemoreduction plus local therapy: experience of the AC Camargo Hospital, Brazil. J Pediatr Hematol Oncol 2006;28:342-5.
4. Chantada GL, Fandino AC, Schvartzman E, Raslawski E, Schaiquevich P, Manzitti J. Impact of chemoreduction for conservative therapy for retinoblastoma in Argentina. Pediatr Blood Cancer 2014;61:821-6.
5. Wilson MW, Haik BG, Rodriguez-Galindo C. Socioeconomic impact of modern multidisciplinary management of retinoblastoma. Pediatrics 2006;118:e331-6.
6. Gombos DS, Hungerford J, Abramson DH, et al. Secondary acute myelogenous leukemia in patients with retinoblastoma: is chemotherapy a factor? Ophthalmology 2007;114:1378-83.
7. Qaddoumi I, Bass JK, Wu J, et al. Carboplatin-associated ototoxicity in children with retinoblastoma. J Clin Oncol 2012;30:1034-41.
8. Munier FL, Beck-Popovic M, Chantada GL, et al. Conservative management of retinoblastoma: Challenging orthodoxy without compromising the state of metastatic grace. ”Alive, with good vision and no comorbidity”. Prog Retin Eye Res 2019;73:100764.
9. Oporto JI, Zuniga P, Ossandon D, et al. Intra-arterial chemotherapy for retinoblastoma treatment in Chile: experience and results 2013-2020. Arch Soc Esp Oftalmol 2020.
10. Funes S, Sampor C, Villasante F, et al. Feasibility and results of an intraarterial chemotherapy program for the conservative treatment of retinoblastoma in Argentina. Pediatr Blood Cancer 2018;65:e27086.
11. Gonzalez ME, Gaviria ML, Lopez M, Escudero PA, Bravo A, Vargas SA. Eye Salvage with Intra-Arterial and Intra-Vitreal Chemotherapy in Patients with Retinoblastoma: 8-Year Single-Institution Experience in Colombia. Ocul Oncol Pathol 2021;7:215-23.
12. Abramson DH, Dunkel IJ, Brodie SE, Kim JW, Gobin YP. A phase I/II study of direct intraarterial (ophthalmic artery) chemotherapy with melphalan for intraocular retinoblastoma initial results. Ophthalmology 2008;115:1398-404, 404 e1.
13. Abramson DH, Dunkel IJ, Brodie SE, Marr B, Gobin YP. Superselective ophthalmic artery chemotherapy as primary treatment for retinoblastoma (chemosurgery). Ophthalmology 2010;117:1623-9.
14. Rowlands MA, Mondesire-Crump I, Levin A, et al. Total retinal detachments due to retinoblastoma: Outcomes following intra-arterial chemotherapy/ophthalmic artery chemosurgery. PLoS One 2018;13:e0195395.
15. Chantada GL, Dunkel IJ, Schaiquevich PS, et al. Twenty-Year Collaboration Between North American and South American Retinoblastoma Programs. J Glob Oncol 2016;2:347-52.
16. Leal-Leal CA, Asencio-Lopez L, Higuera-Calleja J, et al. Globe Salvage With Intra-Arterial Topotecan-Melphalan Chemotherapy in Children With a Single Eye. Rev Invest Clin 2016;68:137-42.
17. Ueda M, Tanabe J, Suzuki T, et al. [Conservative therapy for retinoblastoma–effect of melphalan on in vitro electroretinogram]. Nippon Ganka Gakkai Zasshi 1994;98:352-6.
18. Schaiquevich P, Buitrago E, Taich P, et al. Pharmacokinetic analysis of melphalan after superselective ophthalmic artery infusion in preclinical models and retinoblastoma patients. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2012;53:4205-12.
19. Taich P, Ceciliano A, Buitrago E, et al. Clinical pharmacokinetics of intra-arterial melphalan and topotecan combination in patients with retinoblastoma. Ophthalmology 2014;121:889-97.
20. Schaiquevich P, Buitrago E, Ceciliano A, et al. Pharmacokinetic analysis of topotecan after superselective ophthalmic artery infusion and periocular administration in a porcine model. Retina 2012;32:387-95.
21. Michaels ST, Abruzzo TA, Augsburger JJ, Correa ZM, Lane A, Geller JI. Selective Ophthalmic Artery Infusion Chemotherapy for Advanced Intraocular Retinoblastoma: CCHMC Early Experience. J Pediatr Hematol Oncol 2016;38:65-9.
22. Francis JH, Gobin YP, Dunkel IJ, et al. Carboplatin +/- topotecan ophthalmic artery chemosurgery for intraocular retinoblastoma. PLoS One 2013;8:e72441.
23. Dunkel IJ, Lee TC, Shi W, et al. A phase II trial of carboplatin for intraocular retinoblastoma. Pediatr Blood Cancer 2007;49:643-8.
24. Laurie NA, Gray JK, Zhang J, et al. Topotecan combination chemotherapy in two new rodent models of retinoblastoma. Clin Cancer Res 2005;11:7569-78.
25. Klufas MA, Gobin YP, Marr B, Brodie SE, Dunkel IJ, Abramson DH. Intra-arterial chemotherapy as a treatment for intraocular retinoblastoma: alternatives to direct ophthalmic artery catheterization. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol 2012;33:1608-14.
26. Boddu SR, Abramson DH, Marr BP, Francis JH, Gobin YP. Selective ophthalmic artery chemosurgery (SOAC) for retinoblastoma: fluoroscopic time and radiation dose parameters. A baseline study. J Neurointerv Surg 2017;9:1107-12.
27. Abramson DH, Dunkel IJ, Brodie SE, Marr B, Gobin YP. Bilateral superselective ophthalmic artery chemotherapy for bilateral retinoblastoma: tandem therapy. Arch Ophthalmol 2010;128:370-2.
28. Munier FL, Gaillard MC, Balmer A, et al. Intravitreal chemotherapy for vitreous disease in retinoblastoma revisited: from prohibition to conditional indications. Br J Ophthalmol 2012;96:1078-83.
29. Bogan CM, Kaczmarek JV, Pierce JM, et al. Evaluation of intravitreal topotecan dose levels, toxicity and efficacy for retinoblastoma vitreous seeds: a preclinical and clinical study. Br J Ophthalmol 2021.
30. Tuncer S, Balci O, Tanyildiz B, Kebudi R, Shields CL. Intravitreal Lower-Dose (20 microg) Melphalan for Persistent or Recurrent Retinoblastoma Vitreous Seeds. Ophthalmic Surg Lasers Imaging Retina 2015;46:942-8.
31. Buitrago E, Lagomarsino E, Mato G, Schaiquevich P. Stability of melphalan solution for intravitreal injection for retinoblastoma. JAMA Ophthalmol 2014;132:1372-3.
32. Bossacoma F, Cuadrado-Vilanova M, Vinent J, et al. Optimizing the storage of chemotherapeutics for ophthalmic oncology: stability of topotecan solution for intravitreal injection. Ophthalmic Genet 2020;41:397-400.
33. Winter U, Nicolas M, Sgroi M, et al. Assessment of retinoblastoma RNA reflux after intravitreal injection of melphalan. Br J Ophthalmol 2018;102:415-8.
34. Francis JH, Abramson DH, Ji X, et al. Risk of Extraocular Extension in Eyes With Retinoblastoma Receiving Intravitreous Chemotherapy. JAMA Ophthalmol 2017;135:1426-9.
35. Friedman DL, Krailo M, Villaluna D, et al. Systemic neoadjuvant chemotherapy for Group B intraocular retinoblastoma (ARET0331): A report from the Children’s Oncology Group. Pediatr Blood Cancer 2017;64.
36. Hadjistilianou T, Coriolani G, Bracco S, et al. Successful treatment of macular retinoblastoma with superselective ophthalmic artery infusion of melphalan. J Pediatr Ophthalmol Strabismus 2014;51:32-8.
37. Munier FL, Mosimann P, Puccinelli F, et al. First-line intra-arterial versus intravenous chemotherapy in unilateral sporadic group D retinoblastoma: evidence of better visual outcomes, ocular survival and shorter time to success with intra-arterial delivery from retrospective review of 20 years of treatment. Br J Ophthalmol 2017;101:1086-93.
38. Lumbroso-Le Rouic L, Aerts I, Hajage D, et al. Conservative treatment of retinoblastoma: a prospective phase II randomized trial of neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by local treatments and chemothermotherapy. Eye (Lond) 2016;30:46-52.
39. Villanueva G, Sampor C, Moreno F, et al. Subsequent malignant neoplasms in the pediatric age in retinoblastoma survivors in Argentina. Pediatr Blood Cancer 2022:e29710.
40. Perez V, Sampor C, Rey G, et al. Treatment of Nonmetastatic Unilateral Retinoblastoma in Children. JAMA Ophthalmol 2018;136:747-52.
41. Abramson DH, Daniels AB, Marr BP, et al. Intra-Arterial Chemotherapy (Ophthalmic Artery Chemosurgery) for Group D Retinoblastoma. PLoS One 2016;11:e0146582.
42. Linn Murphree A. Intraocular retinoblastoma: the case for a new group classification. Ophthalmol Clin North Am 2005;18:41-53, viii.
43. Shields CL, Mashayekhi A, Au AK, et al. The International Classification of Retinoblastoma predicts chemoreduction success. Ophthalmology 2006;113:2276-80.
44. Gobin YP, Dunkel IJ, Marr BP, Francis JH, Brodie SE, Abramson DH. Combined, sequential intravenous and intra-arterial chemotherapy (bridge chemotherapy) for young infants with retinoblastoma. PLoS One 2012;7:e44322.
45. Bellaton E, Bertozzi AI, Behar C, et al. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy for extensive unilateral retinoblastoma. Br J Ophthalmol 2003;87:327-9.
46. Liu J, Ottaviani D, Sefta M, et al. A high-risk retinoblastoma subtype with stemness features, dedifferentiated cone states and neuronal/ganglion cell gene expression. Nat Commun 2021;12:5578.
47. Abramson DH. Cell Free DNA (cfDNA) in the Blood of Retinoblastoma Patients The Robert M. Ellsworth Lecture. Ophthalmic Genet 2022:1-5.
48. Levin MH, Gombos DS, O’Brien JM. Intra-arterial chemotherapy for advanced retinoblastoma: is the time right for a prospective clinical trial? Arch Ophthalmol 2011;129:1487-9.
49. Abramson DH, Shields CL, Jabbour P, et al. Metastatic deaths in retinoblastoma patients treated with intraarterial chemotherapy (ophthalmic artery chemosurgery) worldwide. Int J Retina Vitreous 2017;3:40.
50. Taich P, Requejo F, Asprea M, et al. Topotecan Delivery to the Optic Nerve after Ophthalmic Artery Chemosurgery. PLoS One 2016;11:e0151343.
51. Kothari P, Marass F, Yang JL, et al. Cell-free DNA profiling in retinoblastoma patients with advanced intraocular disease: An MSKCC experience. Cancer Med 2020;9:6093-101.
52. Shields CL, Shields JA, Meadows AT. Chemoreduction for retinoblastoma may prevent trilateral retinoblastoma. J Clin Oncol 2000;18:236-7.
53. de Jong MC, Kors WA, de Graaf P, Castelijns JA, Moll AC, Kivela T. The Incidence of Trilateral Retinoblastoma: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Am J Ophthalmol 2015;160:1116-26 e5.