AI Article Synopsis

  • This study aimed to analyze the reasons for orbital exenteration, the demographics of patients undergoing the procedure, and how these findings compare to past research over 20 years at a tertiary eye care center.
  • Researchers evaluated 352 cases, revealing that most patients were middle-aged and that eyelid malignancy, specifically squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), was the primary reason for exenteration.
  • The study found an increase in the absolute number of exenterations but a decrease in the ratio compared to other tumor-related surgeries, highlighting changing trends in clinical practice and patient demographics.

Article Abstract

Purpose: This study aimed to determine the clinical indications for orbital exenteration, demographic profile of these patients, and clinicopathologic correlations in the current times and to compare these results with previous published data.

Methods: It was a retrospective study. All exenterations performed at a tertiary eye care center over a period of 20 years (from January 2001 to June 2020) were retrospectively evaluated. Patient records were reviewed to obtain demographic data, presenting symptoms and their duration, laterality, and clinical and histopathologic diagnosis.

Results: A total of 352 cases (males:females = 222:130) who underwent exenteration were identified. Patients age ranged from 11 months to 87 years (mean: 43.86 years, median: 50 years). The most common indication for exenteration was found to be eyelid malignancy in 54.36%, followed by retinoblastoma in 18.75% and primary orbital tumors in 14.49%. Out of 156 cases of eyelid malignancies requiring exenteration, squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) was the most common histologic subtype ( n = 94, 60.26%), followed by sebaceous gland carcinoma ( n = 40, 25.64%) and basal cell carcinoma ( n = 20, 12.82%). The most common primary orbital tumors requiring exenteration were adenocystic carcinoma of the lacrimal gland in adults and rhabdomyosarcoma in the pediatric age group. Benign conditions requiring exenteration included fulminant fungal orbital infections and lymphangioma among others.

Conclusion: The number of exenterations performed have significantly increased in terms of absolute numbers. However, the ratio of exenteration to other tumor-related surgeries, mainly excision biopsy, has reduced compared to that reported from a previous study. The most common indication in our study remains eyelid malignancy followed by intraocular malignancy. However, SCC has emerged as the most common tumor histologic subtype requiring exenterations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11338408PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/IJO.IJO_2716_23DOI Listing

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