Diode laser ablation of progressive pigmented iris lesions in 317 cats (356 eyes) appears overall safe and effective in decreasing progression of iris pigmentation

Author:

Fuchs Allison A.1,Giuliano Elizabeth A.2,English Robert3,Nadelstein Brad4

Affiliation:

1. Virginia Veterinary Centers, Midlothian, VA

2. Department of Veterinary Medicine and Surgery, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO

3. Animal Eye Care, Cary, NC

4. Animal Eye Care, Virginia Beach, VA

Abstract

Abstract OBJECTIVE To describe a novel scoring system of feline pigmented iris lesions prior to utilization of diode laser ablation of progressive pigmented iris lesions and to retrospectively evaluate short- and long-term patient outcomes following transcorneal diode laser ablation. ANIMALS 317 client-owned cats (356 eyes) were included. CLINICAL PRESENTATION Records of cats undergoing diode laser ablation from January 2000 to December 2018 were retrospectively reviewed. A novel clinical grading system to describe severity of feline iris hyperpigmentation was developed. Recorded parameters included signalment, operated-upon eye, presurgical iris pigmentation score, intraocular pressure, visual status, postoperative complications, repeat laser surgery, patient status at last follow-up, time to death, and presumptive or known cause of death. RESULTS Complications included corneal ulceration (25/356 [7%]), glaucoma (18/356 [5%]), uveitis (4/356 [1.1%]), and corneal edema (3/356 [0.8%]). Enucleation was performed in 12 eyes due to blindness and secondary glaucoma. Repeat laser due to continued progression of pigment was performed in 18.5% of eyes. Two study patients were euthanized due to presumptive metastatic disease. Of the 250 cats for whom confirmation was available via phone call or medical records, 240 (96%) were alive at 1 year. CLINICAL RELEVANCE Diode laser ablation appears safe overall and may be effective in decreasing progression of feline iris pigmentation. Complication risks appear minimal.

Publisher

American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA)

Subject

General Veterinary

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3. A matched observational study of survival in cats with enucleation due to diffuse iris melanoma;Kalishman JB,1998

4. Differential diagnosis of pigmented ocular lesions in the dog and cat;Peiffer R Jr,1981

5. Mutation analysis and gene expression profiling of ocular melanomas in cats;Rushton JG,2017

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