Early Translabyrinthine Surgery for Small- and Medium-Sized Vestibular Schwannomas: Consecutive Cohort Analysis of Outcomes

Autor: Elisabetta, Zanoletti, Antonio, Mazzoni, Francesca Angela, Chiumenti, Domenico, d'Avella, Diego, Cazzador
Rok vydání: 2022
Předmět:
Zdroj: Otology & Neurotology. 43:962-967
ISSN: 1537-4505
1531-7129
Popis: Reappraisal of the role of translabyrinthine (TLAB) surgery in small- and medium-sized vestibular schwannomas (VSs).Retrospective study.Tertiary referral center.A total of 330 consecutive patients diagnosed between 1973 and 2019 with small- and medium-sized VS up to 20 mm in the extrameatal portion submitted to surgical treatment.VS removal through microscopic TLAB approach.Facial nerve function according to the House-Brackmann scale at 12-month follow-up, postoperative complications and entity of tumor resection assessed with postoperative MRI. A comparative analysis of outcomes between two groups of patients was further conducted, according to tumor size: Group A, small-sized (intrameatal or ≤10 mm extrameatal tumors) and Group B, medium-sized VSs (extrameatal between 11 and 20 mm).Complete tumor removal was achieved in all cases. The overall complication rate was 5.5%, being cerebrospinal fluid leak the most frequent. Patients with small-sized VS (n = 121) presented a significantly better facial nerve function than patients with medium-sized tumors (n = 209), showing House-Brackmann Grades I to II in 92.6% versus 73.6% of cases, respectively ( p0.001). A nearly 4.5-fold higher risk of poor facial nerve function at 12 months affects patients with medium-sized tumors (odds ratio, 4.473; 95% confidence interval, 2.122-9.430; p0.001).In the current scenario of multioptional VS management, when hearing preservation is not feasible, early TLAB approach as first-line treatment for small-sized VSs showed favorable results. Factors supporting such proactive surgical treatment include long-term definitive cure, no major complications, good facial nerve outcomes, and the possibility of simultaneous hearing rehabilitation with a cochlear implant.
Databáze: OpenAIRE