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      Observation of angiographic dye leakage in ocular surface squamous neoplasia

      case-report

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          Abstract

          Purpose

          The clinical diagnosis of ocular surface squamous neoplasia is challenging, mostly requiring excisional biopsy. Human tumor angiogenesis is characterized by abnormal vessel architecture and transvascular hyperpermeability. This case report describes features of fluorescein and indocyanine green angiography in a case of conjunctival intraepithelial neoplasia.

          Observations

          Color photography, optical coherence tomography, fluorescein and indocyanine green angiography were performed in a patient with suspected conjunctival intraepithelial neoplasia before excisional biopsy and histologic confirmation of clinical diagnosis. Fluorescein dye showed extensive early extravascular dye leakage within the limits of the lesion. Indocyanine green dye displayed corneal terminal vessel bulbs with early leakage after 70 seconds and showed diffuse intralesional dye leakage after 7 minutes.

          Conclusions

          Increased fluorescein and early indocyanine green dye leakage can be used to confirm active angiogenesis already in early stages of dysplastic ocular surface squamous neoplasia. Late leakage of indocyanine green dye may be due to chronic transvascular hyperpermeability within intrinsic tumor vessels. The leakage behaviour of intravenous dyes has the potential to serve as a diagnostic indicator of active growth in dysplastic ocular surface neoplastic lesions.

          Highlights

          • Ocular surface neoplasia allows a uniquely direct view at tumor angiogenesis.

          • Vascular hyperpermeability is a hallmark in malignant tumor tissues.

          • Angiography dye leakage may aid in the diagnosis of malignant lesions.

          Related collections

          Most cited references12

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          3D microvascular architecture of pre-cancerous lesions and invasive carcinomas of the colon

          Despite the significance of tumour neoangiogenesis and the extensive knowledge on the molecular basis of blood vessel formation currently no quantitative data exist on the 3D microvascular architecture in human primary tumours and their precursor lesions. This prompted us to examine the 3D vascular network of normal colon mucosa, adenomas and invasive carcinomas by means of quantitative microvascular corrosion casting. Fresh hemicolectomy specimens from 20 patients undergoing cancer or polyposis coli surgery were used for corrosion casting, factor VIII and VEGF immunostaining. In addition, immunostaining was done on colorectal tissue from 33 patients with metastatic and non-metastatic carcinomas, polyposis coli and adenomas. This first quantitative analysis of intervessel and interbranching distances, branching angles and vessel diameters in human cancer specimens revealed distinct patterns of the microvascular unit in the tumour centre and periphery. Irrespective of the tumour localization and grading all individual tumours displayed qualitatively and quantitatively the same vascular architecture. This gives further evidence for the existence of a tumour type-specific vascular architecture as recently demonstrated for experimental tumours. Metastatic tumours displayed different vascular architectures only within hot spots, in terms of smaller intervascular distances than in non-metastatic tumours. Pre-cancerous lesions have in part virtually the same vascular architecture like invasive carcinomas. Comparison of VEGF immunostaining also suggests that angiogenesis sets in long before the progress towards invasive phenotypes and that the so-called angiogenic switch is more likely a sequence of events. © 2001 Cancer Research Campaign www.bjcancer.com
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            Conjunctival Tumors: Review of Clinical Features, Risks, Biomarkers, and Outcomes--The 2017 J. Donald M. Gass Lecture.

            Conjunctival tumors encompass a broad range of diagnoses. The 3 most important malignant tumors include ocular surface squamous neoplasia (OSSN) (14%), melanoma (12%), and lymphoma (7%). Conjunctival malignancies are rarely found in children. Regarding OSSN, pre-disposing conditions include chronic solar radiation, immune deficiency (HIV), organ transplant, autoimmune conditions, xeroderma pigmentosum, and chronic exposure to cigarette smoke. OSSN is managed surgically or with topical/injection immunotherapy or chemotherapy. Metastasis occurs in 2 mm thickness or those located in fornix, caruncle, or orbit are at highest risk for metastasis. Regarding lymphoma, predisposing conditions include benign reactive lymphoid hyperplasia, immune deficiency (HIV), immune dysfunction, and chronic inflammation/infection (Helicobacter pylori, Chlamydia psittaci). The 4 most important subtypes include extranodal marginal zone lymphoma (ENMZL), follicular lymphoma, mantle cell lymphoma (MCL), and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. Treatment includes surgical resection, cryotherapy, radiotherapy, systemic chemotherapy, or targeted anti-B-cell therapy (rituximab). Lymphoma-related survival (5-year) depends on subtype and ranges from 97% (ENMZL) to 9% (MCL). Recognizing conjunctival tumors and understanding predisposing factors, biomarkers, and treatment strategies are vital to patient outcomes.
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              • Abstract: found
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              Conjunctival Tumors in 5002 Cases. Comparative Analysis of Benign Versus Malignant Counterparts. The 2016 James D. Allen Lecture

              To evaluate frequency of conjunctival tumors in all ages and compare benign vs malignant counterparts.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Am J Ophthalmol Case Rep
                Am J Ophthalmol Case Rep
                American Journal of Ophthalmology Case Reports
                Elsevier
                2451-9936
                08 September 2020
                December 2020
                08 September 2020
                : 20
                : 100912
                Affiliations
                [a ]Department of Ophthalmology, Medical University of Innsbruck, Austria
                [b ]St. Paul's Eye Unit, Royal Broadgreen University Hospital, Liverpool, UK
                Author notes
                []Corresponding author. Department of Ophthalmology, Innsbruck Medical University, A-6020, Innsbruck, Anichstraße 35, Austria bernhard.steger@ 123456i-med.ac.at
                Article
                S2451-9936(20)30227-9 100912
                10.1016/j.ajoc.2020.100912
                7495007
                0d44035b-9759-4b3b-ab19-389189dda798
                © 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc.

                This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

                History
                : 16 July 2020
                : 29 August 2020
                : 1 September 2020
                Categories
                Case Report

                ocular surface neoplasia,conjunctival intraepithelial neoplasia,indocyanine green angiography,leakage

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