Spectrum of presentation of intraocular metastases from cutaneous melanoma in the era of immunotherapy and targeted therapies.

Publication date: Mar 25, 2025

Intraocular metastases from cutaneous melanoma are rare. Diagnosis can be challenging and there is currently no consensus on treatment. However, with the increasing incidence of this cancer and improved survival of patients treated with targeted BRAF-MEK inhibitors and checkpoint inhibitors, it is likely that more cases will be referred to ocular oncology clinics. Single-centre retrospective study. We included all the patients diagnosed with intraocular metastases from cutaneous melanoma seen between 2017 and 2022. The first patient had bilateral choroidal metastases and unilateral vitreous cells (treated with external beam radiotherapy and immunotherapy), the second had unilateral amelanotic vitreous metastasis (treated with vitrectomy and BRAF-MEK inhibitors) and the third had bilateral multifocal choroidal metastases (treated with BRAK-MEK inhibitors followed by immunotherapy). The fourth patient (previously reported) had unilateral anterior segment and vitreous metastases (treated with immunotherapy and enucleation). Interestingly, two patients had a history of uveitis in the affected eye, unrelated to the ocular metastases. All four patients had synchronous systemic metastases. The diagnosis of intraocular metastases from cutaneous melanoma is generally clinical but it is sometimes challenging because of possible masquerade syndromes. The presence of other extraocular metastatic sites is an indicator of the diagnosis. Cytopathologic proof combined with genetic analysis is sometimes necessary for diagnosis, especially with amelanotic vitreous debris or in rare cases where systemic screening is negative. New treatments with targeted BRAF-MEK inhibitors and checkpoint inhibition may avoid external beam radiotherapy and enucleation in some patients.

Concepts Keywords
Genetic Braf
Immunotherapy Challenging
Masquerade Cutaneous
Unilateral Diagnosis
Immunotherapy
Inhibitors
Intraocular
Mek
Melanoma
Metastases
Rare
Targeted
Treated
Unilateral
Vitreous

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH metastases
disease MESH melanoma
pathway KEGG Melanoma
disease MESH cancer
drug DRUGBANK Tricyclazole
disease MESH uveitis
disease MESH syndromes

Original Article

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