Middle Fossa Approach for Resection of Vestibular Schwannomas: A Decade of Experience.

Publication/Presentation Date

2-1-2019

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The middle cranial fossa (MCF) approach is a challenging surgical technique for the resection of small and intermediate sized, primarily intracanalicular, vestibular schwannomas (VS), with the goal of hearing preservation (HP).

OBJECTIVE: To describe a decade-long, single institutional experience with the MCF approach for resection of VS.

METHODS: This is a retrospective cohort study of 63 patients who underwent the MCF approach for resection of VS from 2006 to 2016. Audiometric data included pure-tone average (PTA), low-tone pure-tone average (LtPTA), word recognition score, and American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery (AAO-HNS) hearing classification at presentation and follow-up. Patients with postoperative serviceable (AAO-HNS class A-B) and/or useful (AAO-HNS class A-C) hearing were compared to those without HP. Facial nerve function was assessed using the House-Brackmann scale.

RESULTS: The mean age and duration of follow-up were 50 ± 13 yr and 21 ± 21 mo, respectively. The mean tumor size was 10 ± 4 mm. The serviceable and usable HP rates were 54% and 50%, respectively. Some residual hearing was preserved in 71% of patients. Large tumor size (P = .05), volume (P = .03), and extrameatal tumor extension (P = .03) were associated with poor audiometric outcomes. The presence of a fundal fluid cap (P = .01) was a favorable finding. At definitive testing, LtPTA was significantly better preserved than traditional PTA (P = .01). Facial nerve outcomes, tumor control rates, and durability of audiometric outcomes were excellent. 47% of patients pursued aural rehabilitation.

CONCLUSION: In our series, the MCF approach for VS provided excellent rates of tumor and facial nerve function, with durable serviceable HP.

Volume

16

Issue

2

First Page

147

Last Page

158

ISSN

2332-4260

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences

PubMedID

29889286

Department(s)

Department of Surgery, Division of Otolaryngology

Document Type

Article

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