Uveal Melanoma
Melanoma is a type of cancer that arises from melanocytes; a cell specialized in the production of melanin. This is a pigment that protects our cell’s DNA from the deleterious effects of sun radiation; in the eye, melanin is thought to aid light absorption. The most frequent melanoma in the body occurs in the skin (i.e. cutaneous melanoma). In the eye, melanoma appears in the uvea – most commonly in the choroid, followed by the ciliary body and then the iris.
Uveal melanoma is a tumour that grows and can invade the surrounding tissues. It sometimes spreads using the blood vessels to reach distant places like the liver. Up to 50% of UM patients develop such metastases, most often in the liver. Unfortunately uveal melanoma metastases remain very difficult and often impossible to treat.
Melanoma of the eye can also occur on the outermost layer of the eye, the conjunctiva, which lines the front part of the eye and the eyelid. This type of melanoma is very rare, and is called conjunctival melanoma. Despite affecting the same organ, uveal melanoma and conjunctival melanomas are very different in their nature.
Treatment
General Approach
Treatments for uveal cancer most often are surgery, radiation therapy, or both. When planning treatment a clinician will take into consideration the following aspects:
- The size of the tumour and its location in the eye;
- How far it has grown or spread – the stage of the tumour;
- How much it is affecting sight;
- The pathology report when available;
- General health and fitness.
There are several concerns when treating uveal melanoma including the preservation of sight. As with many types of cancer, the earlier the diagnosis is made, the easier it is to cure or manage it.
If the tumour is large or already has stopped the patient from seeing, surgery may be needed to remove the eye. This surgery is called enucleation. Previously, treatment consisted only of this possibility. Nowadays, this has been superseded whenever possible by conservative eye-preserving therapies that include various forms of radiation therapy, laser treatment and local tumour resection.
Great concern must also be given to the prevention/treatment of spreading of the tumour to other parts of the body. A positive outcome with the initial treatment of the tumour is very important, however it does not mean the cancer has not spread. Uveal melanoma spreads through the blood vessels and there is no way of testing for this at the present time other than assessing risk with genetic examination of the primary (eye) tumour cells and checking for changes elsewhere in the body, namely the liver.
Managing Metastatic Uveal Melanoma
In a great number of patients with uveal melanoma, metastatic disease is not detected at diagnosis. Up to 50% of patients develop metastatic disease at any time from the initial UM diagnosis to several decades later. The liver may be the only metastatic site even though lung, bone and skin metastases can also form.
Surveillance/Follow up
Since there are controversial results about the different methods available for screening for the appearance of metastatic disease, patients should have an individual plan decided in collaboration with their clinicians.Patients should be informed about the benefits and limitations of a tumour biopsy at this point.
If the tumour is removed from the eye (surgical treatment) or if the patient has a biopsy taken, additional information can be obtained from the tumour tissue to assert:
- The type of tumour cells present
- The cell cycle and division activity of the tumour cells
- The genetic profile of the tumour cells
The importance of a tumour biopsy is the identification of a high-risk group allowing for determination of liver scan frequencies. The gathering of all clinical information with the auxiliary diagnostic scans and furthermore the genetic profile of the tumour (obtained through the biopsy tissue) is crucial for overall risk assessment. Patients should also be offered the decision as to how much information they would like to receive. As the decision whether to find out if they are at high risk of cancer spreading can be very difficult.
Patients that are considered high risk with respect to developing secondary tumours in the liver should be offered a follow up with a clinical review, scans with liver-specific imaging by a non-ionizing modality and a consultant for follow-up support. Continued CT scans of the liver should not be performed and blood tests alone are inadequate.
There is currently discussion on whether clear evidence exists to demonstrate if surveillance after treatment for uveal melanoma metastases is useful. However, it seems reasonable to perform cross-sectional imaging soon after a surgical or non-surgical liver procedure (4-6 weeks) to assess treatment response. Moreover it is recommended by the UK national guidelines (NICE accredited) that the same imaging modality is used for assessment and follow up; contrast-enhanced MRI with DWI is currently thought to be the optimal choice.
About this information
This information was compiled from several sources and applies to uveal melanoma or metastatic uveal melanoma. It does not apply to conjunctival eye melanoma or skin melanoma.