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👁 “Metastatic Orbital Tumors – Clinical Clues and Imaging Insights”

Metastasis to the orbit occurs in about 2–4% of cancer patients,
accounting for 1–3% of all orbital tumors.
All metastases reach the orbit via hematogenous spread, as the orbit lacks lymphatic channels.
Most often, it reflects advanced systemic malignancy and carries a poor prognosis.


🧠 Summary Table – Metastatic Orbital Tumors

FeatureDescription
Common Primary Sites  
Breast cancer (40–70%)  
– Lung, prostate, melanoma  
Spread Mechanism Hematogenous (no lymphatics)
Frequent Symptoms  
Proptosis, diplopia, pain  
– Extraocular muscle palsy, enophthalmos  
Muscle Involvement  
– Usually single EOM (medial or lateral rectus)  
– Often involves muscle belly to tendon  
Imaging (CT/MRI)  
Focal enhancement, soft tissue mass  
– May involve bone and orbital apex  
– Rarely >10mm in size  
Differential Diagnosis  
Thyroid orbitopathy, orbital pseudotumor  
– Lymphoma, trauma-related displacement  
Biopsy  
– Confirm via excisional or fine-needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB)  
Prognosis  
– Poor overall: mean survival ~15 months  
– Treatment focused on palliation and vision preservation  

Clinical Insight
– Late-onset diplopia + prior cancer history = suspect orbital metastasis
– EOM enlargement alone is nonspecific → confirm with imaging and biopsy

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