Ophthalmoscopically guided intraocular fine-needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) under general anesthesia was performed in three suspected cases of retinoblastoma (Rb). The first case presented with uveitis and the second with unusual radiological features. The third case had classical clinical features of bilateral Rb but the parents refused enucleation. After a cytologic diagnosis of retinoblastoma, two cases were subjected to enucleation and a histologic confirmation was obtained. The present article discusses the technique of guided intraocular FNAB and its limitations as well as utility in the preoperative diagnosis of retinoblastoma (Rb). The authors are of the opinion that FNAB should be considered a viable diagnostic option in selected cases of leucocoria when conventional investigative modalities prove inconclusive or for tissue diagnosis when a patient of suspected Rb refuses enucleation.
Copyright 1999 Wiley-Liss, Inc.