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Uveal Melanoma | Meastatic Disease


Gene Expression Profile Class Change in a Case of Aggressive, Recurrent Melanoma

What is Metastatic Liver Cancer?

Uveal Melanoma with Liver Metastases: Patient Experience, Treatment Challenges & Hope on the Horizon

Liver Cancer Treatment Options

Treating uveal melanoma liver metastases with isolated hepatic perfusion

Is DCTH Stock A Future 10-Bagger? Innovative Liver Cancer Treatment, Enormous TAM, Cheap & Unnoticed
What is Uveal Melanoma Metastasis?
Uveal melanoma is the most common primary intraocular (eye) cancer in adults. Although it starts in the uvea (most often the choroid), it has a high risk of metastasis, even years after initial treatment.
Key Points:
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Metastasis rate:
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About 50% of patients with uveal melanoma eventually develop metastases, despite successful local treatment of the eye tumor.
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Most common site of spread:
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Liver (in ~90% of metastatic cases)
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Other possible sites: lungs, bones, and skin
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Risk factors for metastasis:
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Genetic mutations (e.g., BAP1 loss, chromosome 3 monosomy, chromosome 8q gain)
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Tumor size, location (ciliary body tumors have higher risk), and cell type (epithelioid cells = worse prognosis)
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Latency:
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Metastasis can occur months to decades after initial diagnosis and treatment
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Symptoms of metastasis:
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Often related to liver involvement: fatigue, abdominal pain, weight loss, elevated liver enzymes
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May be asymptomatic and found on routine surveillance
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Surveillance:
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Regular liver imaging (MRI or ultrasound) and liver function tests
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No standardized protocol, but often every 3–6 months post-treatment
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Treatment of metastatic disease:
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No proven curative therapy once metastasis occurs
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Options: clinical trials, liver-directed therapies (chemoembolization, radioembolization), immunotherapy, and targeted therapies (e.g., tebentafusp for HLA-A*02:01 patients)
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Prognosis is poor: median survival is 6–12 months after metastasis, though newer treatments may extend life in some cases
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American Society of Retina Specialists
ASRS Leaders & Legends Interview: Stanley Chang, MD


ASRS Leaders & Legends Interview: Stanley Chang, MD

ASRS Leaders & Legends Interview: Charles P. "Pat" Wilkinson, MD, MA
