Differences in Childhood Growth Parameters Between Patients With Somatic and Heritable Retinoblastoma.

Roxana M Hicks ; Xunda Ji ; Yihua Zou ; Sadia Sultana ; Riffat Rashid ; Sadik T Sherief ; Nathalie Cassoux ; Juan L Garcia Leon ; Rosdali Y Diaz Coronado ; Arturo MZ López ; +21 more... Tatiana L Ushakova ; Vladimir G Polyakov ; Soma R Roy ; Alia Ahmad ; M Ashwin Reddy ; Mandeep S Sagoo ; Lamis Al Harby ; Jesse L Berry ; Ashley Polski ; Nicholas J Astbury ; Covadonga Bascaran ORCID logo ; Sharon Blum ; Richard Bowman ; Matthew J Burton ORCID logo ; Nir Gomel ; Naama Keren-Froim ; Shiran Madgar ; Marcia Zondervan ORCID logo ; Swathi Kaliki ; Ido D Fabian ; Andrew W Stacey ; (2024) Differences in Childhood Growth Parameters Between Patients With Somatic and Heritable Retinoblastoma. Investigative ophthalmology & visual science, 65 (4). 39-. ISSN 0146-0404 DOI: 10.1167/iovs.65.4.39
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PURPOSE: Little is known regarding differences in childhood growth between somatic and heritable retinoblastoma (Rb) populations. We aimed to compare childhood growth parameters between somatic and heritable Rb cohorts at birth and at time of diagnosis with Rb. METHODS: A multinational, longitudinal cohort study was conducted with patients from 11 centers in 10 countries who presented with treatment naïve Rb from January to December 2019. Variables of interest included age, sex, and size characteristics at birth and at time of presentation, as well as germline mutation status. After Bonferroni correction, results were statistically significant if the P value was less than 0.005. RESULTS: We enrolled 696 patients, with 253 analyzed after exclusion criteria applied. Between somatic (n = 39) and heritable (n = 214) Rb cohorts, with males and females analyzed separately, there was no significant difference in birth weight percentile, weight percentile at time of diagnosis, length percentile at time of diagnosis, weight-for-length percentile at time of diagnosis, or change of weight percentile from birth to time of diagnosis. Patients with heritable Rb had a smaller mean weight percentile at birth and smaller mean weight and length percentiles at time of diagnosis with Rb, although this difference was not statistically significant. All cohorts experienced a slight negative change of weight percentile from birth to time of diagnosis. No cohort mean percentiles met criteria for failure to thrive, defined as less than the 5th percentile. CONCLUSIONS: Children with Rb seem to have normal birth and childhood growth patterns. There is no definitive evidence that somatic or heritable Rb has a biological or environmental impact on childhood growth parameters.


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