Filed under: Cancer & Chemo
Melanoma develops in the cells that produce melanin — the pigment that gives your skin its color. Your eyes also have melanin-producing cells and can develop melanoma. Eye melanoma is also called ocular melanoma.
Melanoma that originates in your eye is termed a primary eye cancer. Eye melanoma is the most common type of primary eye cancer in adults, but it's rare. If the melanoma begins elsewhere, such as your lung or breast, and then spreads to your eye, it's called a secondary eye cancer.
Treatment is available for eye melanoma, and the earlier it's detected, the better your chance for successful treatment. Getting regular eye exams can help your doctor detect eye melanoma at an earlier stage.
©1998-2009 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research (MFMER). Terms of use.
You may experience no symptoms at all for melanoma of the eye. On the other hand, eye melanomas may cause light flashes, blurring or a dark spot in your vision.
Signs and symptoms to watch for include:
A displacement of your eye within the eye socket
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The exact cause of eye melanoma, also called ocular melanoma, isn't known. Scientists believe that DNA plays a role in causing cells to become cancerous. DNA instructs the behavior of cells, so defects (mutations) in DNA can cause cells to malfunction, sometimes resulting in cancer. Sometimes these mutations are inherited, but they may also be acquired during life.
Although researchers have found an association with eye cancer and certain genetic changes, they haven't yet pinpointed why these changes occur, or even if these changes definitively cause cancer.
Eye melanoma most commonly develops in the uvea, the vascular layer of your eye sandwiched between the retina, the thin layer of tissue that lines the back inner wall of your eyeball, and the white of your eye (sclera). Eye melanoma can occur in the front part of the uvea (iris and ciliary body) or in the back part of the uvea (choroid layer).
©1998-2009 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research (MFMER). Terms of use.
Risk factors for primary melanoma of the eye include:
Sun exposure
Exposure to ultraviolet light has been shown to cause melanoma on the skin, and it's also suspected to be a risk factor for eye melanoma, but this hasn't yet been proved.
©1998-2009 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research (MFMER). Terms of use.
Some types of eye melanomas can be detected only by an eye doctor, so it's a good idea to have regular, routine eye examinations. Because this type of cancer is rare, there's no screening test other than an eye examination.
If you observe a dark spot on your iris that is enlarging, have a doctor examine it. Many doctors believe that skin and eye melanomas start from a mole (nevus). If you have a nevus or a freckle in your eye, have it checked regularly by an eye doctor.
©1998-2009 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research (MFMER). Terms of use.
Having a regular examination of your eyes by a physician eye specialist (ophthalmologist) is the first and most important step in early detection and diagnosis of eye melanoma.
Your doctor will examine the outside of your eye, looking for enlarged blood vessels that can indicate a tumor inside your eye. Then, with the help of instruments, your doctor will look inside your eye. One method, called ophthalmoscopy, uses lenses and a bright light mounted on your doctor's forehead — a bit like a miner's lamp. Another method, called slit-lamp biomicroscopy, uses a microscope that produces an intense beam or line of light to illuminate the interior of your eye.
In most cases, looking inside your eye alone will be enough to detect and diagnose any tumors or other abnormalities.
Further evaluation of suspected melanoma
If your doctor suspects you may have eye melanoma, you may undergo one of a number of imaging tests:
Ultrasound. This painless procedure uses high-frequency sound waves from a hand-held, wand-like apparatus called a transducer, which can produce precise images of structures within your body. It's an important test for diagnosing and evaluating eye tumors. Eye melanomas often have a characteristic appearance on the ultrasound. Your doctor also uses ultrasound to measure the thickness of the tumor to help determine the most appropriate treatment. The initial ultrasound further provides a baseline measurement for comparison as you go through your treatment plan.
In this test you sit in a chair in your doctor's office. The transducer is placed against either your eyelid or the front surface of your eye, in which case your eye is numbed with anesthetizing drops. A lubricant placed on the transducer may run down your cheek, but the procedure itself doesn't cause discomfort or pain. There may be some discomfort after the procedure has been completed if the surface of the cornea becomes scratched during the test, but this usually gets better within hours.
Determining further spread of the cancer
Your doctor may also recommend additional diagnostic procedures to determine whether the cancer has spread (metastasized) to other parts of your body, such as your liver or your lungs. Eye melanoma can spread through your bloodstream. Tests may include:
Computerized tomography (CT). Computerized tomography is an X-ray technique that produces images of your internal organs that are more detailed than are those produced by conventional X-ray exams. Conventional X-ray exams use a stationary X-ray machine to focus beams of radiation on a particular area of your body to produce two-dimensional images. CT scans use an X-ray-generating device that rotates around your body and a powerful computer to create cross-sectional images of the inside of your body.
Often, after the first set of X-rays is taken, a contrast dye is injected intravenously and a second set of pictures is taken. The dye helps better outline structures in your body.
If you have an eye melanoma, the CT scan will concentrate on your liver and lungs because they are the most common locations to which an eye melanoma is likely to spread.
Tissue sample
If your doctor isn't sure whether a tumor is a melanoma, he or she may obtain a tissue sample (biopsy). This is usually done by removing a small sample of tumor cells from your eye. These cells are then evaluated in the laboratory. However, doctors usually can make a confident diagnosis of eye melanoma using methods other than biopsy.
©1998-2009 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research (MFMER). Terms of use.
After eye melanoma is diagnosed, you and your doctor will review your treatment options. Factors to be considered are the location and size of the melanoma, as well as your overall physical health. Some doctors may also consider the genetics of the tumor (cytogenetics) when deciding on the best treatment course. However, this is a topic currently being debated in the medical community and some experts feel that more studies are needed to determine the best type of profiling for predicting tumor behavior and outcomes.
Melanomas of the eye are rare, so it's a good idea to find a doctor with experience in treating these cancers. In addition, a second opinion can provide more information and help you feel more confident about your treatment plan.
Sometimes, doctors suggest observing a small lesion rather than treating it right away. But your doctor will generally recommend treatment for a medium-sized or large-sized melanoma.
Treatment designed to destroy a melanoma often will cause some loss of vision, even though every effort is made to preserve vision. But because cancers of the eye can be fatal, in some cases you'll need treatment even if it means loss of vision or loss of your eye.
Surgery is the foundation for most eye cancer treatments. If an eye melanoma is of a certain size and in a favorable location, treatment can sometimes be accomplished with surgery alone. Treatment for other eye melanomas may be done with radiation alone, or radiation combined with a therapy such as infrared laser.
Surgery
Depending on the characteristics of the tumor, your doctor may choose from a variety of surgical procedures to remove the melanoma:
Radiation therapy
Carefully targeted and regulated doses of high-energy radiation — radiation therapy — can destroy ocular melanoma and be lifesaving.
Radiation therapy damages cells by destroying the genetic material that controls how cells grow and divide. And although both healthy and cancerous cells are damaged by radiation, the goal of treatment is to hurt as few normal, healthy cells as possible.
Doctors generally reserve radiation treatment for eye melanomas to medium-sized and large-sized melanomas, although selected small-sized melanomas may sometimes be treated with radiation. The radiation dose can be delivered with charged particles such as proton beams, which are generated from outside of your body and directed into your eye (teletherapy). Or, the radiation can come from small radioactive seeds that are temporarily anchored to your eye (brachytherapy).
In brachytherapy, a small implant (plaque) similar to a bottle cap and containing several radioactive seeds (usually iodine 125 seeds) is sutured to the wall of your eye at a site overlying the tumor. The plaque remains in place for four to five days until it has delivered an optimal amount of radiation for the characteristics of your tumor. The device is then removed, and your doctor will monitor the tumor at regular intervals to watch for tumor shrinkage.
Small eye melanomas
There has been a recent trend toward treating small eye melanomas with either radiation therapy or transpupillary thermotherapy (TTT) — a type of infrared laser therapy — or both. Destroying the cancerous tissue by freezing it (cryotherapy) also has been used for some small eye melanomas.
©1998-2009 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research (MFMER). Terms of use.
While no direct link has been established between sun exposure and eye melanoma, an association has been found. Because of this, some doctors recommend regular use of UV-blocking sunglasses as a possible preventive measure.
©1998-2009 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research (MFMER). Terms of use.
The result of eye melanoma and its treatment can be traumatic for you — partial or complete loss of vision and, in some cases, removal of your eye (enucleation). Overcoming the trauma and the challenges involves the support of your friends and family, adequate time to heal and adjust, and modern technology.
If your cancer treatment leaves you with vision in only one eye (monocular vision), it's still possible to do most things you were able to do with two working eyes. But you'll need to make adjustments, primarily regarding your ability to judge distance, and it may be more difficult to be aware of things around you, especially things occurring on the side without vision.
©1998-2009 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research (MFMER). Terms of use.


