The lateral transorbital approach to the medial sphenoid wing, anterior clinoid, middle fossa, cavernous sinus, and Meckel’s cave: target-based classification, approach-related complications, and intermediate-term ocular outcomes

Author:

Mathios Dimitrios1,Bobeff Ernest J.123,Longo Davide1,Nilchian Parsa1,Estin Joshua1,Schwartz Alexandra C.1,Austria Quillan4,Anand Vijay K.5,Godfrey Kyle J.14,Schwartz Theodore H.1

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Neurological Surgery,

2. Department of Neurosurgery, Barlicki University Hospital, Łódź, Poland; and

3. Department of Sleep Medicine and Metabolic Disorders, Medical University of Łódź, Poland

4. Ophthalmology, Weill Cornell Medical College, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York;

5. Otolaryngology, and

Abstract

OBJECTIVE The lateral transorbital approach (LTOA) is a relatively new minimal access skull base approach suited for addressing paramedian pathology of the anterior and middle fossa. The authors define target zones for this approach and describe a series of cases with detailed measurements of visual outcomes, including those obtained with exophthalmometry. METHODS The authors performed a retrospective analysis of a consecutive series of LTOA patients. Seven target zones were identified: 1) the orbit, 2) the lesser sphenoid wing and anterior clinoid, 3) the middle fossa, 4) the lateral wall of the cavernous sinus and Meckel’s cave, 5) the infratemporal fossa, 6) the petrous apex, and 7) the anterior fossa. The authors used volumetric analyses of preoperative and postoperative MR and CT imaging data to calculate the volume of bone and tumor removed and to provide detailed ophthalmological, neurological, and cosmetic outcomes. RESULTS Of the 20 patients in this cohort, pathology was in zone 2 (n = 10), zone 4 (n = 6), zone 3 (n = 2), zone 1 (n = 1), and zone 5 (n = 1). Pathology was meningioma (n = 10), schwannoma (n = 2), metastasis (n = 2), epidermoid (n = 1), dermoid (n = 1), encephalocele (n = 1), adenoma (n = 1), glioblastoma (n = 1), and inflammatory lesion (n = 1). The goal was gross-total resection (GTR) in 9 patients, all of whom achieved GTR. Subtotal resection (STR) was the goal in 8 patients (5 spheno-orbital meningiomas, 1 giant cavernous sinus/Meckel’s cave schwannoma, 1 cavernous sinus prolactinoma, and 1 cavernous sinus dermoid), 7 of whom achieved STR and 1 of whom achieved GTR. The goal was biopsy in 2 patient and repair of encephalocele in 1. Visual acuity was stable or improved in 18 patients and worse in 2. Transient early postoperative diplopia, ptosis, eyelid swelling, and peri-orbital numbness were common. All 9 patients with preoperative diplopia improved at their last follow-up. Seven of 8 patients with preoperative exophthalmos improved after surgery (average correction of 64%). There were no cases of clinically significant (> 2 mm) postoperative enophthalmos. The most frequent postoperative complaint was peri-orbital numbness (40%). There was 1 CSF leak. Most patients were satisfied with their ocular (84%–100% of patients provided positive satisfaction-related responses) and cosmetic (75%–100%) outcomes. CONCLUSIONS The LTOA is a safe minimal access approach to a variety of paramedian anterior skull base pathologies in several locations. Early follow-up revealed excellent resolution of exophthalmos with little risk of clinically significant enophthalmos. Transient diplopia, ptosis, and peri-orbital numbness were common but improved. Careful case selection is critical to ensure good outcome.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

Subject

Genetics,Animal Science and Zoology

Reference41 articles.

1. Lessons learned in the evolution of endoscopic skull base surgery;Schwartz TH,2019

2. Endoscopic cranial base surgery: classification of operative approaches;Schwartz TH,2008

3. Endoscopic transorbital surgery: another leap of faith?;Schwartz TH,2022

4. Use of endoscopic transorbital and endonasal approaches for 360° circumferential access to orbital tumors;Jeon C,2020

5. Transorbital debulking of sphenoid wing meningioma;Smith CS,2022

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