Genetic evaluation should be part of retinoblastoma care

November 14, 2011 - Baylor College of Medicine
By Dana Benson
713-798-8267
benson@bcm.edu

Results of a study by Baylor College of Medicine physicians underscore the important role that clinical genetic evaluation can have in the management plan of patients with retinoblastoma, a childhood cancer of the eye.

The report documents the success of using a multi-disciplinary team approach to achieving the goal of providing genetic evaluation and testing of all retinoblastoma patients at Texas Children's Cancer Center over an eight-year period. Results were published in the Archives of Ophthalmology.

Determining risk

"Integrating genetic evaluation into retinoblastoma care helps in understanding whether the disease is inherited or not, and being armed with that information is important for patient screening as well as for determining at-risk relatives," said Dr. Shweta Dhar, assistant professor of molecular and human genetics and director of the adult genetics program at BCM, lead author of the paper.

Retinoblastoma affects about 350 infants and children in the United States each year and is the most common malignant tumor of the eye in children. Retinoblastoma is often curable, but may result in the loss of the eye.

Bilateral or Unilateral?

The disease takes two forms. Bilateral retinoblastoma is inherited and can affect one or both eyes and is often seen in infants and younger children. Unilateral retinoblastoma affects only one eye and generally occurs in older children. It may or may not be hereditary.

The clinical team including ophthalmologists, pediatric oncologists, pathologists, geneticist and genetic counselors completed genetic evaluation of nearly 65 percent of patients. Testing that included both DNA sequencing and other more advanced tests, such as copy number analysis, resulted in a higher yield. Overall, the genetic analysis demonstrated the causative mutation in 90 percent of patients with bilateral retinoblastoma and documented the hereditary form of retinoblastoma in 17 percent of patients with unilateral retinoblastoma.

Knowing whether the patient's disease is hereditary helps determine whether the patient is at increased risk for other cancers in the future.

In addition, genetic results from retinoblastoma patients led to the testing of 46 at-risk relatives, mostly parents and siblings. These tests determined that only six carried the mutation and required follow-up screening by an ophthalmologist. Forty relatives who underwent genetic testing were negative and do not require extensive screening.

Eliminating unnecessary tests

"Without genetic testing, most relatives, particularly infant siblings, of retinoblastoma patients undergo eye examinations under anesthesia to screen for tumors," explained Dr. Sharon Plon, professor of pediatrics – hematology/oncology and of molecular and human genetics at BCM and senior author of the study. "What we were able to show is that by systematically including genetic testing in the care of retinoblastoma patients we could eliminate the need for such screening in the majority of relatives and save both health care costs and potential risks of the anesthesia."

Others involved in the research included Dr. Murali Chintagumpala and Claire Noll, Dr. Evelyn Paysse, all of BCM, and Dr. Patricia Chevez-Barrios of The Methodist Hospital.

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