Secondary orbital exenteration for conjunctival melanoma: A study of 25 cases.

2021 
Summary Introduction The treatment of conjunctival melanoma is most often conservative, but exenteration is sometimes necessary in order to achieve local control of the disease. It can be performed as a primary procedure in cases of locally advanced disease or as a secondary procedure after one or more recurrences. No benefit to secondary exenteration on patient survival has been demonstrated to date for conjunctival melanoma, and it is generally considered a palliative procedure. Patients and methods Single-center retrospective study performed in the ocular oncology department of the Institut Curie (Paris, France). We included all patients who underwent secondary orbital exenteration for conjunctival melanoma between January 2008 and January 2016. Results Twenty-five patients underwent secondary exenteration for conjunctival melanoma. The maximum number of local recurrences prior to exenteration was six. Metastases occurred in 11 patients after exenteration and were more common when there was a greater tumor thickness on histology, if the tumor had not been treated initially in an ocular oncology center, or if there had been a greater number of local recurrences before the secondary exenteration was performed. Seventy-five percent of patients developed metastases when the exenteration was performed after 5 or 6 local recurrences. Conclusion This study suggests that early secondary exenteration (i.e. after a number of local recurrences less than or equal to 4) may reduce the occurrence of metastases (and therefore improve patient survival) in conjunctival melanoma. Thus, secondary exenteration might be a curative surgery in some patients with recurrent disease.
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