Background: Reported data regarding intraocular lymphoma (IOL) management are anecdotal. Cases of IOL included in an international multicentre series of 378 immunocompetent patients with primary central nervous system lymphomas (PCNSLs) were reviewed.
Patients and methods: Staging included slit-lamp examination in 170 patients: IOL was diagnosed in 22 cases (13%). A concomitant brain lesion was detected in 21 cases. Planned treatment was chemotherapy followed by radiotherapy in 13 cases, chemotherapy alone in three and radiotherapy, followed by or not by chemotherapy in five; one patient was not treated. Chemotherapy included high-dose methotrexate in 12 cases. Ten patients received intrathecal chemotherapy. Radiotherapy consisted of whole brain irradiation, followed by or not by a tumour bed boost; ocular irradiation was planned in 15 cases. Irradiation in one patient without brain lesions was limited to the orbits only (50 Gy).
Results: IOL was positively correlated to systemic symptoms and meningeal disease. Fifteen patients (71%) achieved an objective response; 16 patients experienced a failure (2-year failure-free survival 34+/-10%). Failures involved the eyes in eight cases, with a 2-year time to ocular relapse of 59+/-11%. Ocular failure was less common in patients treated with chemotherapy plus ocular irradiation and was associated with a significantly shorter survival. Seven patients are alive [median follow-up 53 months, 2-year overall survival (OS): 39+/-11%] , five of whom were treated with ocular irradiation. The patient with isolated IOL is alive and disease-free at 14 months. OS of the entire series was similar to that of PCNSL patients with negative slit-lamp examination.
Conclusions: IOL is usually associated with concomitant brain disease and shows a survival similar to that of the rest of PCNSLs. Chemotherapy combined with ocular irradiation resulted in better control of ocular disease, which seems to be associated with survival. In view of the potential role of ocular irradiation, the use of chemotherapy alone in phase II trials should be critically reconsidered in PCNSL patients with ocular disease.