Eye Tumor Treatment

Treatment Goals for Uveal Melanoma

If you are being treated for uveal melanoma, your physician’s goals may include:

  • Assessing your individual risk of metastasis
  • Preventing local growth of the eye tumor and minimizing any damage to ocular tissues
  • Preserving as much of your vision as possible

Eye-Sparing Radiation Is the Most Common Therapy

The size and location of the eye tumor, your ability to undergo surgery, and personal preference are important factors that will help determine which treatment is best for you. Radiation therapy is the most widely used, with about 80-90% of uveal melanoma patients receiving some form of radiation of the tumor. Plaque radiotherapy is the most common form, in which a radioactive disc, or plaque, is placed directly onto the surface of the eye to destroy the tumor. The process takes a couple of days and then the plaque is removed.

myuveal-radiation.svg

Proton Beam Therapy

Proton beam therapy is an alternative to plaque radiotherapy. In this treatment, small rings (clips) are placed around the edges of the eye tumor to direct the radiation beams and spare the surrounding healthy tissue.

myuveal-proton.svg

Enucleation

Enucleation, or removal of the eye, is performed in about 10% of patients. It is usually done when the tumor is too large to treat with radiation, has bled significantly, destroyed much of the eye tissue, or has spread beyond the eye.

myuveal-enucleation.svg

Treatment options are considered highly effective at curing the primary tumor.

Learn How DecisionDx®-UM
Can Help Determine
Your Personalized Risk

myum-riskidentified.svg

Timing Is Critical – Talk With Your Doctor

Our Discussion Guide Will Help Determine If DecisionDx-UM Is Right for You

Hear From Other Patients

Learn How DecisionDx-UM Has Made a Significant Impact on the Lives of Other Uveal Melanoma Patients.

myuveal-patients1.png

What’s Next?

Will My Eye Cancer Spread?

How Do You Get a
DecisionDx®-UM Test?