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CASE REPORT
Orbital mass secondary to infantile acute lymphoblastic leukaemia
  1. Ibtesham Tausif Hossain1,
  2. Mariya Moosajee2,
  3. Yassir Abou-Rayyah2,
  4. Vesna Pavasovic3
  1. 1School of Medicine, Imperial College London, London, UK
  2. 2Department of Paediatric Ophthalmology, Great Ormond Street Hospital For Children NHS Trust, London, UK
  3. 3Department of Malignant Haematology, Great Ormond Street Hospital For Children NHS Trust, London, UK
  1. Correspondence to Ibtesham Tausif Hossain, ibtesham.hossain11{at}imperial.ac.uk,

Summary

An 8-month-old Asian infant girl was referred with a 1-week history of left periorbital swelling on a background of a narrowed left palpebral aperture over the preceding 8 weeks. There was no history of chronic illness, fever or other systemic features. Examination revealed a tender and fluctuant medial canthal swelling with associated periorbital haematoma. There were no other ophthalmic findings and neurological examination was normal. A MRI scan of the brain and orbit demonstrated abnormal soft tissue with features of an aggressive tumour in the left orbital region with no globe invasion. Peripheral blood smear revealed blast cells, confirmed by bone marrow aspirate. A diagnosis of infant acute lymphoblastic leukaemia was made. The patient was started on risk-stratified chemotherapy according to the Interfant-06 Protocol. The periorbital swelling resolved by day eight following a course of prednisolone, the patient continues on chemotherapy and is currently in molecular remission.

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