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Efficacy of a prolonged stability melphalan formulation for intra-arterial treatment of retinoblastoma. J Neurointerv Surg 2023 Jun 28

Date

06/29/2023

Pubmed ID

37380354

DOI

10.1136/jnis-2023-020170

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-85164308597 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Melphalan, which is poorly soluble at room temperature, is widely used for the treatment of retinoblastoma by selective ophthalmic artery infusion. Evomela, a propylene glycol-free formulation of melphalan with improved solubility and stability, has recently been used as an alternative.To compare the safety and efficacy of Evomela with standard-formulation melphalan (SFM) in the treatment of retinoblastoma by selective ophthalmic artery infusion.

METHODS: We performed a retrospective case-control study of patients with retinoblastoma undergoing selective ophthalmic artery infusion with SFM or Evomela at a single institution. Cycle-specific percent tumor regression (CSPTR) was estimated by comparing photos obtained during pretreatment examination under anesthesia (EUA) with those obtained during post-treatment EUA 3-4 weeks later. CSPTR, ocular salvage rates, complication rates, operation times (unadjusted and adjusted for difficulty of ophthalmic artery catheterization), and intraprocedural dose expiration rates were compared between Evomela- and SFM-treated groups. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed.

RESULTS: Ninety-seven operations (melphalan: 45; Evomela: 52) for 23 patients with 27 retinoblastomas were studied. The ocular salvage rate was 79% in the SFM-treated group and 69% in the Evomela-treated group. Multivariate regression controlling for tumor grade, patient age, and treatment history revealed no significant differences in ocular salvage rate, CSPTR, complication rates, or operation times. Although the dose expiration rate was higher for the SFM-treated group, the difference was not statistically significant. Notably, there were no ocular or cerebral ischemic complications.

CONCLUSION: Evomela has non-inferior safety and efficacy relative to SFM when used for the treatment of retinoblastoma by selective ophthalmic artery infusion.

Author List

Jubran JH, Luong H, Naik A, Srinivasan VM, Ramasubramanian A, Li A, Scherschinski L, Feldman MJ, Albuquerque FC, Abruzzo TA

Author

Aparna Ramasubramanian MD Associate Professor in the Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences department at Medical College of Wisconsin