Retinal metastasis from unknown primary: diagnosis, management, and clinicopathologic correlation

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Kenneth J. Taubenslag, MPhil
Stephen J. Kim, MD
Albert Attia, MD
Ty W. Abel, MD, PhD
Hilary Highfield Nickols, MD, PhD
Kristin K. Ancell, MD
Anthony B. Daniels, MD, MSc

Abstract

A 75-year-old man was incidentally found to have a yellow-white retinal lesion with scattered hemorrhages. He was empirically treated elsewhere for viral retinitis without resolution and later transferred to the Vanderbilt Eye Institute, where retinal biopsy with silicone oil tamponade showed retinal metastasis. He had no prior history of cancer, and multiple systemic imaging evaluations failed to identify a primary site. Histopathology and immunohistochemistry of the biopsy were consistent with non-small-cell lung carcinoma. Due to the radiation-attenuating properties of silicone oil, the patient underwent silicone oil removal prior to receiving external beam radiotherapy (EBRT). The retinal metastasis responded completely to EBRT, and at final follow-up, 18 months after initial presentation, no primary tumor has been identified.

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How to Cite
1.
Taubenslag KJ, Kim SJ, Attia A, Abel TW, Nickols HH, Ancell KK, Daniels AB. Retinal metastasis from unknown primary: diagnosis, management, and clinicopathologic correlation. Digit J Ophthalmol. 2015;21(4):71-75. doi:10.5693/djo.02.2015.04.004
Section
Case Reports