ASG Eye Hospital Raises Awareness on Retinoblastoma: Early Detection Can Save Children’s Vision
Retinoblastoma's white eye glow in photos signals eye cancer in kids under 5. Early detection via red reflex test saves vision/life; treatment advances in India.
Retinoblastoma in Children: Why Early Detection Matters More Than Most Parents Realise
Table Of Content
- Understanding Retinoblastoma and Who It Affects
- Early Signs of Retinoblastoma That Parents Should Know
- Eye Cancer in Children: Symptoms | What to Look for in Photographs
- Pediatric Eye Cancer Diagnosis: How It Is Confirmed
- Retinoblastoma Treatment in India: What the Process Involves
- The Role of Routine Eye Checks in Children
- Why Early Detection Changes Everything
- FAQs
Understanding Retinoblastoma and Who It Affects
Retinoblastoma starts in the retina, the thin layer at the back of the eye that processes light and sends signals to the brain. In young children, certain cells in the retina can begin dividing uncontrollably, forming a tumour. It sounds complicated, but the biology matters less than this simple fact: it grows fast, and it responds well to treatment when it has not spread far. Retinoblastoma almost always affects children under five. Some cases run in families, passed down through a gene mutation. In those situations, both eyes can be affected, and siblings or future children may carry the same risk. A parent with a family history of retinoblastoma should not wait for symptoms. Screening can begin at birth. One of the most common questions doctors hear is whether retinoblastoma can be cured. In many cases, yes, particularly when it is found while still confined to the eye.Early Signs of Retinoblastoma That Parents Should Know
Children rarely complain about their vision changing. They do not know what they are supposed to see. So the early signs of retinoblastoma tend to be spotted by someone watching, a parent, a grandparent, a nursery teacher, or a paediatrician doing a routine check. The sign that gets noticed most often is a white or yellowish glow in the pupil. In medical terms, it is called leukocoria. In everyday life, it shows up most clearly in flash photographs, where one eye catches the light differently from the other. In person, under normal lighting, it can be almost invisible, which is why so many families recall noticing it first in a photo rather than face-to-face. Beyond that, other changes that may point to a problem include:- One eye turning inward or outward, or appearing misaligned
- Persistent redness or visible swelling around the eye
- A shift in the colour of the iris
- A child rubbing or closing one eye more than usual
- Older children mentioning they cannot see properly from one side
Eye Cancer in Children: Symptoms | What to Look for in Photographs
It might sound like an overstatement, but a mobile phone camera has genuinely helped catch retinoblastoma in children before a doctor ever got the chance to look. Eye cancer in children often shows up in photographs long before they become obvious in daily life. The white reflex in child’s eye, leukocoria, happens because the tumour reflects light back through the pupil in a way healthy retinal tissue does not. With flash photography, that reflection can be quite stark. Families describe noticing it at birthday parties, in holiday videos, in a random selfie taken on a Sunday afternoon. Some noticed it across several photos spanning months and convinced themselves it was just the camera angle. If one eye consistently shows a pale or white reflection in flash photos, while the other shows the usual red-eye, that is worth taking seriously. It does not mean something is definitely wrong. But it does mean a specialist should take a look.Pediatric Eye Cancer Diagnosis: How It Is Confirmed
When a child is brought in with a suspected eye problem, the examination needs to be thorough and with very young children, that usually means doing it under general anaesthesia. A toddler cannot be asked to stay still and look in a particular direction for the time it takes to properly examine the retina. The ophthalmologist uses a specialised indirect ophthalmoscope to view the back of the eye in detail. If a tumour is present, its location, size, and spread are assessed. Ultrasound imaging can help map the extent of what is inside the eye. An MRI is used to check whether anything has spread beyond it. A concern that comes up almost every time is whether the child will lose the eye. Understandably so. But the honest answer is that it depends almost entirely on when the diagnosis happens. Caught early, the eye can very often be saved. Caught late, the priority shifts to saving the child’s life. At ASG Eye Hospital, paediatric eye examinations are carried out in a setting designed with young patients in mind, because a child who is calm and comfortable makes for a far more accurate assessment.Retinoblastoma Treatment in India: What the Process Involves
Retinoblastoma treatment in India has come a long way. Families in cities across the country now have access to approaches that, not long ago, were only available at a handful of specialised centres abroad. Treatment is never one-size-fits-all. It is built around how far the tumour has progressed, whether one eye or both are involved, and what is most likely to preserve vision while eliminating the cancer. The options commonly used include:- Chemotherapy – given either through a vein or directly into the artery supplying the eye, to shrink the tumour before other treatments are applied
- Laser therapy or cryotherapy – used to target and destroy smaller tumours with precision
- Radiation therapy – considered in specific cases where other approaches are not sufficient
- Surgical removal of the eye – only when the tumour is at an advanced stage, and saving the eye is no longer a safe option




