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Trilateral Retinoblastoma: Incidence and Outcomes
Sponsor: Amsterdam UMC, location VUmc
Summary
Patients with heritable retinoblastoma are at risk to develop an intracranial brain tumor, which is often fatal. The investigators intend to look at the incidence and survival of trilateral retinoblastoma (which is a brain tumor that can either be located in the pineal gland or elsewhere in the brain) in retinoblastoma patients globally. All retinoblastoma patients from participating centers will be included. The investigators hypothesize that the apparent incidence of trilateral retinoblastoma (especially the usually later diagnosed pineal trilateral retinoblastoma) in low-income countries will be lower because of low chances of surviving the ocular tumors at about 50% and also because of possible under-diagnosis. Therefore, as retinoblastoma care improves in low-income countries the incidence of (pineal) trilateral retinoblastoma might go up. Knowledge about incidence and survival can help improve health practices in parts of the world where this might be needed. Therefore this global study firstly aims 1) to evaluate survival after trilateral retinoblastoma and factors influencing survival and 2) to evaluate incidence of trilateral retinoblastoma by country income level. The study will run from 2024 through 2027.
Official title: Global Survey of Trilateral Retinoblastoma: Incidence and Outcomes
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
Any - Any
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
4351
Start Date
2024-01-01
Completion Date
2029-12-31
Last Updated
2024-04-16
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Incidence and survival of trilateral retinoblastoma and the differences globally
The detection and survival of trilateral retinoblastoma around the world and for instance differences between high- and low-income countries in terms of incidence and survival.
Locations (1)
Amsterdam UMC
Amsterdam, North Holland, Netherlands