• Otol. Neurotol. · May 2004

    The evolution of surgical approaches for posterior fossa meningiomas.

    • Ted Shen, Rick A Friedman, Derald E Brackmann, William H Slattery, William E Hitselberger, Marc S Schwartz, and Laurel Fisher.
    • House Ear Clinic, House Ear Institute, and University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California, USA.
    • Otol. Neurotol. 2004 May 1; 25 (3): 394-7.

    ObjectiveTo evaluate surgical outcomes for the treatment of posterior fossa meningiomas at the House Ear Clinic from 1987 to 2001. We review our current treatment algorithm and present our postoperative outcomes with attention to facial and auditory neural preservation.Study DesignRetrospective review.SettingTertiary care center.PatientsMedical records of 71 patients who underwent posterior fossa meningioma surgery at the House Ear Clinic were reviewed.InterventionAll patients had surgical removal of their meningioma via translabyrinthine, transcochlear, retrosigmoid, extended middle fossa, or combined petrosal approaches by House Ear Clinic neurotologists and neurosurgeons.Main Outcome MeasuresPreoperative and postoperative auditory and facial nerve function data were collected. Patient and tumor characteristics including presenting symptoms, completion of tumor resection, and complications secondary to surgery were also recorded.ResultsThe most common presenting symptoms in this series were otologic, with hearing loss (61%), tinnitus (58%), and imbalance (58%) as the three most common. Gross total resection was achieved in 67 (94%) patients. Hearing-preservation surgery was attempted in 37 (52%) patients (68% via extended middle fossa or combined approach). Twenty-one patients with preoperative Class A hearing had follow-up audiometric data and 18 (86%) had serviceable hearing preserved. Excluding transcochlear craniotomies, 85% of patients had normal facial nerve function postoperatively. Cerebrospinal fluid leak (6%) was the most common complication.ConclusionsAdvances in microsurgical techniques have greatly changed our management of patients with posterior fossa meningiomas. These changes have reduced postoperative morbidity. Specifically, use of the anterior and posterior petrosal approaches has facilitated facial and auditory neural preservation while not compromising the extent of tumor excision.

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