Anterior Extension of Tumor is as Important as Tumor Size to Facial Nerve Outcome and Extent of Resection for Vestibular Schwannomas

Author:

Wong Ricky1,Copeland William2,Jacob Jeffrey2,Sivakanthan Sananthan3,Van Gompel Jamie2,van Loveren Harry4,Link Michael2,Agazzi Siviero4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurologic Surgery, NorthShore University Health System, Pritzker School of Medicine, Evanston, Illinois, United States

2. Department of Neurologic Surgery, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, United States

3. Department of Neurologic Surgery, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States

4. Department of Neurologic Surgery, University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida, United States

Abstract

Objectives We examined vestibular schwannoma tumor dimension and direction of growth to determine whether these correlate with facial nerve outcome as well as extent of resection (EOR). Design Retrospective review of prospectively maintained databases. Participants 206 patients were a part of this study. Main Outcome Measures Tumor dimensions were measured using preoperative magnetic resonance imaging, and a series of ratios were then calculated to further characterize tumor dimension. Regression analyses were performed to investigate correlation with facial nerve outcome and EOR. Results Patients with tumor extending >1.5 cm anterior to the internal auditory canal (IAC) (AB measurement) were three times more likely to have postoperative House-Brackman grades of 3 or worse. We also found that an EB/BF ratio (representing elongated growth parallel to the IAC axis) ≥1.1 was associated with half the risk of poor facial nerve outcome. Tumors with anterior-posterior diameter (AC measurement) >1.9 cm were five times less likely to undergo gross total resection (GTR). Furthermore, an increased degree of tumor extension into the IAC (DE measurement >2.4 cm) or an increased amount of brainstem compression (EB measurement >1.1 cm) were each associated with a nearly 3-fold decrease in the likelihood of GTR. Conclusion Our study demonstrates that anterior extent of the tumor is as important as tumor size to facial nerve outcome and degree of resection for vestibular schwannomas.

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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