Conjunctival melanoma following cornea transplant from a cancer donor: A case report

Am J Ophthalmol Case Rep. 2023 Jan 28:29:101809. doi: 10.1016/j.ajoc.2023.101809. eCollection 2023 Mar.

Abstract

Purpose: Conjunctival melanoma is a rare ocular tumor. We report a case of ocular conjunctival melanoma during topical immunosuppression, after a corneal transplant from a donor with metastatic melanoma.

Observation: A 59-year-old white male presented with a progressive nonpigmented conjunctival lesion in his right eye. He had previously undergone two penetrating keratoplasties, and he was being treated with topical immunosuppression with 0.03% tacrolimus (Ophthalmos Pharma; Sao Paulo, SP/Brazil). The histopathology evaluation revealed the nodule to be a conjunctival epithelioid melanoma. The donor's death cause was disseminated melanoma.

Conclusion and importance: The correlation between cancer and systemic immunosuppression after a solid organ transplant is widely known. The local influence, however, has not been reported. In this case, a causal relationship was not established. The correlation between conjunctival melanoma, exposure to topical tacrolimus immunosuppressive therapy, and the malignance characteristic of donor cornea should be better evaluated.

Keywords: Cornea; Keratoplasty; Melanoma; Tacrolimus.

Publication types

  • Case Reports