Characterizing Hearing Outcomes Following Treatment of Cerebellopontine Angle Meningiomas

IF 0.9 4区 医学 Q3 Medicine
Michael Papazian, Justin Cottrell, Lydia Pan, Emily Kay-Rivest, David R. Friedmann, Daniel Jethanamest, Douglas Kondziolka, Donato Pacione, Chandranath Sen, John G. Golfinos, J. Thomas Roland Jr., Sean O. McMenomey
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objectives To characterize treatment and hearing outcomes for cerebellopontine angle (CPA) meningiomas with inherent risks of hearing loss and identify predictors of hearing loss for surgically treated lesions.

Design Retrospective chart review.

Setting Tertiary care medical center.

Participants Adult patients with CPA meningiomas impinging upon cranial nerve VIII and/or pretreatment hearing loss managed with microsurgery or stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) with Gamma Knife at our center between 2012 and 2023.

Main Outcome Measures Hearing preservation rate was determined from analysis of patients with pretreatment serviceable hearing for whom hearing-preserving treatment was attempted. Surgical patients were further analyzed using multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression models to identify factors predictive of postoperative hearing loss.

Results We identified 80 patients with CPA meningiomas meeting inclusion criteria who were managed with either microsurgery (43, 54%) or radiosurgery (37, 46%). Following SRS, hearing was preserved in 88% of cases. Following microsurgery, hearing was preserved in 71% of patients—all patients who lost hearing had tumors involving the internal auditory canal (IAC). Among surgical patients only, multivariable analysis accounting for preoperative hearing, recurrence status, lesion size, and patient age, the preoperative imaging finding that the CPA meningioma surrounded the vestibulocochlear nerve was significantly associated with hearing loss (hazard ratio: 10.3, 95% confidence interval: 1.3–81.4, p = 0.02).

Conclusion Most patients with meningiomas of the CPA can experience preservation of hearing, even when there is risk of hearing loss based on pretreatment evaluation. IAC invasion and surrounding of eighth nerve by tumor may portend poorer hearing outcomes in surgically managed patients.

小脑脑膜瘤治疗后听力结果的特征描述
目的 探讨具有听力损失固有风险的小脑脑膜瘤(CPA)的治疗和听力结果,并确定手术治疗病变听力损失的预测因素。设计 回顾性病历审查。地点 三级医疗中心。参与者 2012年至2023年期间在本中心接受显微手术或伽玛刀立体定向放射手术(SRS)治疗的CPA脑膜瘤侵犯颅神经VIII和/或治疗前听力损失的成人患者。主要结果指标 听力保留率是通过分析治疗前听力尚可并尝试过听力保留治疗的患者来确定的。使用多变量 Cox 比例危险回归模型对手术患者进行进一步分析,以确定术后听力损失的预测因素。结果 我们确定了 80 名符合纳入标准的 CPA 脑膜瘤患者,他们接受了显微外科手术(43 人,54%)或放射外科手术(37 人,46%)。接受 SRS 治疗后,88% 的病例保留了听力。显微手术后,71%的患者保留了听力--所有失去听力的患者的肿瘤都涉及内耳道(IAC)。仅在手术患者中,考虑到术前听力、复发状况、病变大小和患者年龄等因素的多变量分析显示,术前成像发现 CPA 脑膜瘤围绕前庭大神经与听力损失显著相关(危险比:10.3,95% 置信区间:1.3-81.4,P = 0.02)。结论 大多数 CPA 脑膜瘤患者可以保留听力,即使根据治疗前的评估存在听力损失的风险。IAC受肿瘤侵犯和第八神经被肿瘤包围可能预示着手术治疗患者的听力较差。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
516
期刊介绍: The Journal of Neurological Surgery Part B: Skull Base (JNLS B) is a major publication from the world''s leading publisher in neurosurgery. JNLS B currently serves as the official organ of several national and international neurosurgery and skull base societies. JNLS B is a peer-reviewed journal publishing original research, review articles, and technical notes covering all aspects of neurological surgery. The focus of JNLS B includes microsurgery as well as the latest minimally invasive techniques, such as stereotactic-guided surgery, endoscopy, and endovascular procedures. JNLS B is devoted to the techniques and procedures of skull base surgery.
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