NEW TREATMENT DESIGNED TO SAVE MORE EYES FROM CANCER
Doctors at Cincinnati
Children's Hospital Medical Center have developed a new technique for treating
the eye cancer retinoblastoma to improve the odds for preventing eye loss,
blindness or death in children with advanced forms of the disease.
Treatments for
retinoblastoma have progressed dramatically in recent years, one being a
procedure called ophthalmic artery infusion chemotherapy. A tiny catheter is
inserted into an artery that provides blood flow (and chemotherapy) directly to
the eye and tumor. Originally introduced in the late 1980s, direct ophthalmic
artery infusion significantly increases treatment effectiveness while reducing
side effects.
Unfortunately, many
children with retinoblastoma are not good candidates for conventional
ophthalmic artery infusion -- in particular younger, smaller patients with
advanced disease, according to Todd Abruzzo, MD, director of Interventional
Neuroradiology at Cincinnati Children's.
"The catheters
are so large compared to the smaller arteries of the child that they restrict
blood flow to the eye, causing back pressure that pushes blood flow and
chemotherapy away from the eye and tumor," Abruzzo said.
"Unfortunately, for too many of these children there is no option other
than enucleation, or loss of the eye. You can imagine what that means for a
child."
Four-year-old Khloe
Cline is one of these children. Her case was especially challenging because she
had advanced cancer in both eyes (bilateral retinoblastoma). When she developed
retinoblastoma at 18 months old, doctors in her hometown of Indianapolis
identified 11 tumors in both eyes.
After an
unsuccessful attempt with conventional chemotherapy therapy, Khloe's physicians
referred her to Cincinnati Children's, where researchers have been testing an
innovation to ophthalmic artery infusion chemotherapy.
Working with
physicians in the Cancer and Blood Diseases Institute (CBDI) at Cincinnati
Children's, Abruzzo developed a double-catheter infusion technique that
involves inflating a tiny balloon in the external carotid artery to prevent
backpressure and ensure blood and chemotherapy flow to the eye and tumor. He
further improved the technique by administering verapamil, a drug that
increases the flow of chemotherapy to the tumor and helps block the tumor's
ability to pump chemotherapy away before it does its job.
The result is a
safe, effective and reproducible method for delivering chemotherapy treatment
to the eye, especially in patients with advanced retinoblastoma who are not
candidates for conventional infusion therapy, according to a recent study
Abruzzo and colleagues published in the Journal of Neurointerventional
Surgery. Of 19 eyes (17 patients) treated in the study, 11 eyes
were saved.
After undergoing a
series of treatments at Cincinnati Children's with the new procedure, Khloe's
mother, Alicia Gray, credits the physicians with saving her daughter's eyes and
allowing her to retain functional eyesight. And while Khloe's eyes have been
scarred and her vision is not perfect, she carries on like any normal energetic
four-year-old, with a penchant for learning and a strong desire to be a doctor
when she grows up.
"Just to look
at her, you would never know (about her eye cancer). That's why I have to tell
people, like her teachers, 'you might notice this child falls a lot or runs
into things if she's running. She probably shouldn't be running too much,'
" explains Ms. Gray. "But Khloe tells me all the time she wants to be
a doctor. She loves coming to the hospital. The doctors here brought us all the
way and they did it for her."
Although additional
research into the new double-catheter technique continues and its overall
benefit still must be verified in larger clinical studies, its development is
part of a larger overall effort at Cincinnati Children's to broaden the range
of enhanced treatment options for children with retinoblastoma, according to
James Geller, MD, Khloe's oncologist and a physician in the CBDI.
This comprehensive
approach to retinoblastoma includes investigating different delivery techniques
for cancer-fighting drugs and testing the dosage levels and safety of different
chemotherapies. It also includes helping patients and their families
successfully manage the treatment process and life after the cancer is gone.
In Khloe's
particular case, where the cancer was in both eyes and other effective
treatment options were very limited, the new double-catheter procedure helped
saved her vision, Geller said.
"In the field
of pediatric oncology we have had a lot of success in past years, but in
reality we don't have an every-year situation where we can bring a new
technology to the forefront and actually see a difference in a case-by-case
basis," Geller said. "With the advent of selective ophthalmic
arterial infusion, and being able to build the retinoblastoma team we have, and
then to see kids like Khloe come here who were perceived to have no options and
suddenly save two eyes -- it's wonderful for her more than anyone else, but
it's wonderful for all of us who are involved in treating retinoblastoma and
other families facing it."
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