Primary vitreoretinal lymphoma: a diagnostic and management challenge.
Carole SoussainDenis MalaiseNathalie CassouxPublished in: Blood (2021)
Primary vitreoretinal lymphoma (PVRL) is a rare form of primary central nervous system (CNS) lymphoma (PCNSL) arising in the intraocular compartment without brain involvement. Despite its apparent indolent clinical course, PVRL can cause permanent vision loss and CNS relapse, the major cause of death in patients with PVRL. The pathophysiology of PVRL is unknown. As in PCNSL, the transformation of the tumor cells likely originates outside the CNS, before the cells migrate to the eye and proliferate within an immune-permissive microenvironment. PVRL exhibits a biased immunoglobulin repertoire, suggesting underlying antigen selection. The diagnosis remains challenging, requiring close coordination between ophthalmologists and cytologists. Because of their rarity and fragility in the vitreous, lymphoma cells cannot always be identified. Interleukin levels, molecular biology, and imaging are used in combination with clinical ophthalmological examination to support the diagnosis of PVRL. Multi-institutional prospective studies are urgently needed to validate the equivocal conclusions regarding treatments drawn from heterogeneous retrospective or small cohort studies. Intravitreal injection of methotrexate or rituximab or local radiotherapy is effective at clearing tumor cells within the eyes but does not prevent CNS relapse. Systemic treatment based on high-dose methotrexate chemotherapy, with or without local treatment, might reduce this risk. At relapse, intensive consolidation chemotherapy followed by stem cell transplantation can be considered. Single-agent ibrutinib, lenalidomide, and temozolomide treatments are effective in patients with relapsed PVRL and should be tested as first-line treatments. Therapeutic response assessment based on clinical examination is improved by measuring cytokine levels but still needs to be refined.
Keyphrases
- high dose
- stem cell transplantation
- diffuse large b cell lymphoma
- induced apoptosis
- blood brain barrier
- low dose
- locally advanced
- cell cycle arrest
- hodgkin lymphoma
- free survival
- early stage
- stem cells
- acute myeloid leukemia
- radiation therapy
- multiple myeloma
- cross sectional
- cell death
- optical coherence tomography
- squamous cell carcinoma
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- vascular endothelial growth factor
- resting state
- chronic lymphocytic leukemia
- brain injury
- multiple sclerosis
- white matter
- ultrasound guided
- cell proliferation
- radiation induced
- single molecule
- functional connectivity
- diabetic retinopathy
- photodynamic therapy
- combination therapy
- rare case
- mass spectrometry
- diffusion weighted imaging