Borderline choroidal lesions exist: a small melanoma can resemble a benign naevus, especially early. Differentiation depends on synthesis of history, examination, and multimodal imaging. ¹ ²
Features that increase suspicion include:
- Thickness above 2 millimetres ¹
- Subretinal fluid
- Orange pigment/lipofuscin ³
- Symptoms (blur, distortion, scotoma)
- Margin near the optic disc
- Concerning ultrasound characteristics
A second opinion is appropriate if a lesion is labelled “suspicious” without clear evidence, if imaging is incomplete, or if the follow-up plan is unclear. Reassessment often involves repeating baseline tests, comparing prior images, and documenting risk features explicitly. ²
The goal is not to alarm patients; it is to ensure that classification is correct and that management matches risk. When uncertainty persists, ocular oncology input is the safest pathway. ³
References
- Shields CL, Demirci H, Materin MA, Marr BP, Mashayekhi A, Shields JA. Clinical factors in the identification of small choroidal melanoma. Canadian Journal of Ophthalmology. 2004;39(4):351-357. doi:10.1016/S0008-4182(04)80005-X. PMID: 15327099.
- Shields CL, Furuta M, Berman EL, Zahler JD, Hoberman DM, Dinh DH, et al. Choroidal nevus transformation into melanoma: analysis of 2514 consecutive cases. Archives of Ophthalmology. 2009;127(8):981-987. doi:10.1001/archophthalmol.2009.151. PMID: 19667334.
- Dalvin LA, Shields CL, Lally SE, Huang X, Ancona-Lezama D, Williams BK Jr, et al. Combination of multimodal imaging features predictive of choroidal nevus transformation into melanoma. British Journal of Ophthalmology. 2019;103(10):1441-1447. doi:10.1136/bjophthalmol-2018-312967. PMID: 30523045.
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