Advances in Molecular Understanding of Ocular Adnexal Disease
A special issue of International Journal of Molecular Sciences (ISSN 1422-0067). This special issue belongs to the section "Molecular Genetics and Genomics".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (15 March 2024) | Viewed by 13498
Special Issue Editor
2. Department of Pathology, Section Ophthalmic Pathology, Erasmus MC University Medical Center, 3000 CA Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Interests: ocular oncology; neuro-oncology; autoimmune periorbital disease
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The ocular adnexal structures only make up a small volume when compared to other organs, with an orbital content of 30 cm3, a conjunctival surface area of 17 cm2 and a corneal surface area of 120 mm2. However, these structures, including the lacrimal gland, orbital tissues, cornea, conjunctiva, caruncle and eyelids, can yield a host of different neoplasms and disease processes. Due to the relative rarity of ocular adnexal tumors, in many cases, therapy is often guided in analogy to that for similar, more common, tumor types elsewhere in the body. It remains to be proven what is the optimum treatment for these particular patients. Other disease processes such as dry eye disease, pterygia/pinguecula and (auto-) immune diseases are responsible for a high burden of disease worldwide with vision loss as an ultimate consequence for many.
The full molecular characteristics of the diseases from this region are not fully known. Many advances have recently been made in the molecular understanding lymphoma, melanoma, squamous carcinoma and sebaceous carcinoma; however, whether there are special molecular–genetic or epigenetic features of tumors particular to this region is, as yet, insufficiently certain. Dry eye disease and degenerations like pterygia/pinguecula also have proven to be driven by different molecular processes that may show overlap with pathways described in neoplasms. Therefore, detailed information on chromosomal aberrations, gene fusions, mutations and epigenetics (such as microRNA, long-non-coding RNA and methylation profiling) may offer important new insights.
This Special Issue invites authors to submit comprehensive molecular biological work that aims to elucidate the molecular and epigenetic mechanisms operable in diseases of the ocular adnexa. As rare as these may be, a better understanding of their molecular genetic bases and epigenetics is essential for improving the diagnosis and treatment of patients.
Dr. Robert M. Verdijk
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- ocular adnexa
- neoplasm
- carcinoma
- melanoma
- lymphoma
- degeneration
- inflammation
- immune disease
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