Multimodal imaging in radiation retinopathy following orbital metastasis

Srinivasan Sanjay, Isha Acharya, Priya Srinivasan, Padmamalini Mahendradas
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 Case Presentation: A 55-year-old woman diagnosed with stage-4 metastatic breast carcinoma presented with gradual diminution of vision in the left eye (OS) over 5 months. Vision in the right eye was lost because of orbital radiotherapy for orbital metastasis. The patient underwent multiple sessions of chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Examination of the left eye revealed a best-corrected distance visual acuity (BCDVA) of 20/30. Fundus examination of the OS revealed multiple cotton-wool spots and retinal hemorrhages. Fundus fluorescein angiography (FFA) showed diffuse macular leakage with capillary nonperfusion. Multicolor imaging (MCI) with Spectralis™ revealed black dots in the blue and green reflectance images, corresponding to capillary dilatation on FFA. Darker dots were more evident in the infrared images. BCDVA improved to 20/20 in OS after tapering the dose of oral steroids for 2 months, with improvements in hemorrhages and cotton-wool spots. Focal laser photocoagulation was recommended for the treatment of persistent macular edema. The patient declined further treatment, was lost to follow-up, and passed away 6 months later.
 Conclusions: This case highlights the importance of multimodal imaging for the identification and classification of radiation retinopathy. MCI using SpectralisTM has been described for the first time in radiation retinopathy and can be used to complement existing imaging modalities. Future studies involving more patients and a longer follow-up duration may provide better results for the applicability of these imaging modalities in the clinical setting.","PeriodicalId":475725,"journal":{"name":"Medical hypothesis, discovery & innovation in optometry","volume":"91 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Medical hypothesis, discovery & innovation in optometry","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.51329/mehdioptometry184","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Background: Radiation retinopathy is a major cause of vision loss in patients receiving radiotherapy to the head and orbit. Diabetic retinopathy is included in the differential diagnosis owing to similar clinical features, including microaneurysms, cotton-wool spots, hard exudates, and macular edema. The only significant pathological difference is that radiation retinopathy spares pericytes, unlike diabetic retinopathy. Multimodal imaging helps diagnose and predict the prognosis of radiation retinopathy, which is presented in this case report. Case Presentation: A 55-year-old woman diagnosed with stage-4 metastatic breast carcinoma presented with gradual diminution of vision in the left eye (OS) over 5 months. Vision in the right eye was lost because of orbital radiotherapy for orbital metastasis. The patient underwent multiple sessions of chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Examination of the left eye revealed a best-corrected distance visual acuity (BCDVA) of 20/30. Fundus examination of the OS revealed multiple cotton-wool spots and retinal hemorrhages. Fundus fluorescein angiography (FFA) showed diffuse macular leakage with capillary nonperfusion. Multicolor imaging (MCI) with Spectralis™ revealed black dots in the blue and green reflectance images, corresponding to capillary dilatation on FFA. Darker dots were more evident in the infrared images. BCDVA improved to 20/20 in OS after tapering the dose of oral steroids for 2 months, with improvements in hemorrhages and cotton-wool spots. Focal laser photocoagulation was recommended for the treatment of persistent macular edema. The patient declined further treatment, was lost to follow-up, and passed away 6 months later. Conclusions: This case highlights the importance of multimodal imaging for the identification and classification of radiation retinopathy. MCI using SpectralisTM has been described for the first time in radiation retinopathy and can be used to complement existing imaging modalities. Future studies involving more patients and a longer follow-up duration may provide better results for the applicability of these imaging modalities in the clinical setting.
眼眶转移后放射性视网膜病变的多模态成像
背景:放射性视网膜病变是头部和眼眶放疗患者视力丧失的主要原因。由于类似的临床特征,包括微动脉瘤、棉絮斑、硬渗出物和黄斑水肿,糖尿病视网膜病变被列入鉴别诊断。与糖尿病视网膜病变不同,唯一显著的病理差异是放射性视网膜病变不包括周细胞。多模态成像有助于诊断和预测放射性视网膜病变的预后,本病例报告介绍了这一点。病例介绍:一名55岁的女性被诊断为4期转移性乳腺癌,在5个月的时间里左眼视力逐渐下降。右眼视力丧失是由于眼眶放射治疗眼眶转移所致。病人接受了多次化疗和放疗。左眼检查显示最佳矫正距离视力(BCDVA)为20/30。眼底检查发现多个棉斑和视网膜出血。眼底荧光素血管造影(FFA)显示弥漫性黄斑渗漏伴毛细血管不灌注。Spectralis™的多色成像(MCI)显示蓝色和绿色反射图像中的黑点,对应于FFA上的毛细血管扩张。红外图像中较暗的点更明显。口服类固醇剂量逐渐减少2个月后,OS的BCDVA改善至20/20,出血和棉絮斑有所改善。推荐局部激光光凝治疗持续性黄斑水肿。患者拒绝进一步治疗,失访,6个月后去世。结论:本病例强调了多模态影像学对放射性视网膜病变鉴别和分类的重要性。使用SpectralisTM的MCI首次被描述为放射性视网膜病变,可用于补充现有的成像方式。未来的研究涉及更多的患者和更长的随访时间,可能会为这些成像方式在临床环境中的适用性提供更好的结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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