Ocular melanoma is a rare and aggressive form of melanoma that occurs in the eye. Around 200 Australians are diagnosed with this eye cancer each year. Many ocular melanoma cases are initially detected during a routine eye test at an optometrist or ophthalmologist.
Uveal melanoma is a form of ocular melanoma found in the middle layer of the eye called the uvea.
Ocular and uveal melanoma are clinically and biologically different to skin melanoma.
A person with ocular melanoma may be asymptomatic or the cancer may be picked up incidentally during a routine eye exam. Symptoms may include:
- Visual changes – blurred vision, flashing lights, loss of peripheral vision, floaters and/or specks
- Redness of the eye
- Eye pain
- Brown or dark patches on the white of the eye
- Change in the colour of the iris
- Changes in the shape or size of the pupil