Early surgery and definitive cure in small sporadic vestibular schwannoma

To report surgical outcomes of a cohort of small sporadic vestibular schwannoma and discuss the role of early surgery. Retrospective descriptive analysis of 234 consecutive patients with small vestibular schwannoma operated on with translabyrinthine or hearing preservation surgical approaches. Outco...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Acta otorhino-laryngologica italica 2022-10, Vol.42 (5), p.481-486
Hauptverfasser: Zanoletti, Elisabetta, Concheri, Stefano, Tealdo, Giulia, Cazzador, Diego, Denaro, Luca, d'Avella, Domenico, Mazzoni, Antonio
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:To report surgical outcomes of a cohort of small sporadic vestibular schwannoma and discuss the role of early surgery. Retrospective descriptive analysis of 234 consecutive patients with small vestibular schwannoma operated on with translabyrinthine or hearing preservation surgical approaches. Outcome measures were control of disease, postoperative facial nerve function, complications and hearing outcome. A translabyrinthine approach was performed in 59% of cases, hearing preservation surgery in 40% and transmeatal approach in 1%, respectively. Complete resection was achieved in 100% of cases. Overall, postoperative major and minor complications were 8.5% in the series, with complete recovery and no sequalae. Facial nerve function at one year postoperatively was House-Brackmann scale (HB) 1-2 in 95% of cases. The rate of hearing preservation was 70% A-B-C classes of Tokyo classification and 77% AB classes of AAOHNS classification. Early surgery in small vestibular schwannoma is a valid option, due to good functional outcomes, low morbidity and definitive cure. Early surgery is associated with better outcomes when considered in relation to non-surgical treatments reported in the literature.
ISSN:1827-675X
1827-675X
DOI:10.14639/0392-100X-N2322